N THE CUSTODY Of TME BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY. ^HELF N° ^' AUAMb ■'aA^^. VL^.^. \ T R V E L THROUGH HOLLAND, FLANDERS, GERMANY, 4) E N M A R K, SWEDEN, LAPLAND, RUSSIA, The UKRAINE, AND POLAND, IN THE Years 17^8, 1769, and 1770, In which is particularly minuted, THE PRESENT STATE THOSE COUNTRIES, RESPECTING THEIR AGRICULTURE, POPULATION, MANUFACTURES, COMMERCE, The ARTS, and USEFUL UNDERTAKINGS. By JOSEl ^H MARSHALL, Efq. THE S E C 0 N D EDITION • V 0 L. in. ' LONDON: Printed for J. Almon, oppofite Burlington-Houfe, Piccadilly. MDCCLXXIIL ,. ^ CONTENTS of Vol. III. Travels through Sweden, conthiued. Chap. I. journey from Llndfal to HudwicJ:- fwald — 'T'he Country, and the Hujhandry car- ried on by the Peafants — Horjien — Defcrip- iton of M. de Verfpof s fine Seat at Raverf- hurgh — An Account of his very fpiritcd im- provements. Chap. II. Hern f and — P leafing Adventure ivith a Swedifh Peafant — Hufhandry — Uma — State of Commerce — Pitha — T)efcription of the Country — Torneo — State of the Country im Kaf Bothnia — Admirable Management of a Farmer — A Swedifh Club — Remarkable Country- — Nyfot — VVyburg, Chap. III. General Reflections on the State of Sweden— Religion— Liearning— The fine Arts "—Manner of Life — Governmetit — Agrictih ture — Manufa^ures— ^Commerce — Wealth-^ Population — 'Travelling . Travels through Ruffia. Chap. IV. Defcription of Peterfhurg — Gene- ral Accounts of the Rmpire of Ruffia — The Emprefs — Government — ManufaBures — Trade — Army — Navy — Prefent State. Chap. V. Journey from Peterfhurg to Mof- cow — Defcription of the Country — Great Settlement of Poles — Mofcow^ — Journey into the Ukraine — Account of that fine Province ii CONTENT S. — DefcriptJoji of the Agriculture of it — Cul- ture of Hemp ^ Tobacco, &c. Chap. VI. Journey to Peterfurg througJj the Frontiers of Poland — Obfervations on the State of fever al Provinces — RuJJian Acquifi- tions — Remarks on the JVar between the Ruf- fians and the Turks — Journey to Archangel^ and through Lapland — Return to Peterfhufg — Livonia. Travels through Poland and Pru/Iia. C H A p . VI I . Journey to Dantzick — Defcription of the Country and Hujbandry — Trade of Dantzick — Journey to Warfaw — Miferable State of Poland — To Brefaw. Travels through Germany. Chap. VIII. Silefa — Brefaw — Journey to Berlin— The Country— Agricuhure—Dejcrip' '' tion of Berlin — Prefent State of the King of Pruffids Forces, Revenues, ^c. — Saxony — Leipjick — Drefden — State of the Ele^orate, Chap. IX. Journey acrofs Bohemia — Prague — Defcription of the Country — The People — Nobility — Hujbandry — Manuf allures— Mo- ravia — Olmutz — Brijin — Journey to Vienna — Defcription of the Capital. Chap. X . Journey from Vienna through Aufria — Defcription of the Archduchy — Bavaria — Munich — Revenues and Forces.^-* Tra- Travels through Swedeitj Continued. Vol. I!L ' B I 3 ] CHAP. I. r yournty from hin^fiil to Hudzv'ichfwald — The Country ,, and the Hu/handry carried on by the Peafants — Horjien — Defcription of M, de Verfpofs fine Seat at Kaverjhurgh — An 'Jlccount of his very fpirited Improvements. IT Was the evening of the 28th of June, before 1 arrived at Lindfal, which is a little inconliderable village. From thence I fet out next morning for Hudwickfwald, the diftance fixty miles, which proved a jour- ney of two days. The night of the lil: I laid ^t Dilfbo ; the country very wild and moun- tainous, like Dalecarlia, and not better culti- vated : in fome of the vales are fmall villages, the inhabitants of fome of which have little farms, but, I do not think, are quite fo induf- trious in the management of them, as their neighbours of Dalecarlia. Dilfbo ftands ou a river near the Baltic, and has a harbour, that admits fhips of two hundred tons bur- then, yet there is hardly any trade at it : now and then, a veilel comes for a load of timber, bivt it is feldom. From thence to B % • Hud^ 4 TRAVELS THROUGH Hudwickfwald is through a fiat country, pretty well cultivated, and the inhabitants much more induflrious. I faw two or three large houfes, furrounded by conliderable farms ; gentlemen's feats ; and the owners feem to carry on a hufbandry, equal to any thing, I have feen in Sweden in general. I found their crops, generally good ; and the products rife, upon a medium of all forts, to three or four quarters per acre : their dwarf beans are a favourite crop here, for I faw many fields of them : they do not grow more than a foot high. Another thing I found here, of which I had feen little before, which was, great plenty of trefoil; it is a fort, not com- mon in England, tho* the blo0bm is yellow; they fow it among their corn, and for two or three years following mow or feed it; which appears to be the fame fyftem, as the cul- ture of clover and trefoil in England, and alfo fainfoin. Artificial graffes I have very rarely (een in this kingdom, and there is certainly a reafon for it; the great plenty of wild ground and marfhes, on which the pea« fants depend for the fubfiftance of their cattle. -■ Hudwickfwald is extremely well fituated for the Baltic trade ; the harbour is fpacious, fafe, and admits fhips of any burthen: there are a few merchants in the town, that are rich. SWEDEN. 5; rich. They have a tolerable quay ; they Ihewed me the church, which is ufually exhi- bited to Grangers, but contains not the leafl thing worth J of obfervation. Moft of the ftreets are regular, clean, and fome of them Tery neatly built. Here I made enquiries after M. de Verfpot^ and found, after fome difficulty, that I mufl: take the road north to a village, called Tuna^ and from thence follow a road, which runs weftward near the river, on which Tuna ftands, and in about five or fix and thirty milesjl fliould come to a place called Horften, near which, that gentleman's feat is. , The firft of July I got to Tuna, the distance from Hudwickfwald thirty-fix miles. The country is various ; parts of it marfhy, and parts dry : a good deal of the latter is culti- vated, but I faw no gentlemen's houfes. I found, that many of the peafants here paid their rents in parts of the products of their land, and that their kndlords fte wards came in floops from Stockholm, at a certain time of the year, to receive thefe products : this is reckoned here very advantageous to the land- lords, for they have the corn, &c. at a much iefs calculated value, than w^hat they fell it for at Stockholm, all expenges reckoned ; but at the fame time, the peafants like it better, than B 3 being 6 TRAVELS THROUGH bchig forced to find the money, which Is vefjr fcarce here. They cultivate large quantities of corn, and many turneps and carrots; and have the art of fattening axen with thefe roots in winter, by boihng and m^ing them, and then mixing fome meal of barley or oats with them : with this food their oxen and their hogs fatten very quickly, and they reckon, if the crop of roots is good, it proves, in this way of ufnig it, one of the befl a farmer can cultivate. They do not ufe wood-aflies in this country, which is fo principal a manure in moflof the parts of Sweden, through which I have pafled, but depend totally on dung, which they mix up with earth, and think, it thus exceeds any- other manure, that can be had. The dung of fwine, they reckon the mofl powerful. I reached Horften the 2d; and, fixing my bed in the houfe of a civil peafant, made enqui- ries after M. de Verfppt. I was informed, that he. lived about eight miles from thence; that all Horften belonged to him, and alfo many more villages in the neighbourhood : — that he had the greateft eftate in this country ; was infinitely beloved, being a good friend to all the peafants, and encouraging them in every thing. The 3d in the morning, I fet out for his houfc, and got there by breakfaft. I was introduced to him in company of his wife, and SWEDEN. 7 and fix or {even children of different ages ; and delivering M. le Count de Roncellen's letter, he read it ^yith feeming pleafure, and with the •utmpft politenefs welcomed me to Ravefburg, the name of his feat. The. Count had fully explained to him the motives of my travels through Svveden, which he was pjeafed to commend very much. He is a lufty Ojan, of about fifty years of age, with a fine .open., manly countenance, that prejudices one, at firfl fight, in his favour. He fpeaks French fluently; had been in England, but not long enough to learn the language. He made many enquiries after M. de Roncellen, and his im- provempnts, whi,le we breakfafted ; faid, that he had not been able of fome years to pay him a vifit, but that he hoped once more to have that pleafiare if he lived. He told me, he had a packet for me, dire6:ed under my name, ^/i KngUfi gentleman on his travels through Sweden. This he gave me in the after- noon, and I found it a letter from Baron Miflle rat Stockholm, v/ith cafh to the amount of forty-feven pounds, the produ6:of the fale of chaiie and horfes, Vv-^hich I thought a very good' return in Sweden. M. de Veripot aiked me concerning my route; and was much fur- prized, at findingthatlhadpenetratedthrough the whole province of Delacarlia, He faid, B 4 it. 8 TRAVELS T H R O tJ G Ff it was a bold undertaking, and tho* he had travelled through moft parts of Sweden, yet he had feen very little of that province. I gave him a curlbry account of what I had remarked among the peafants there, with which he feemed to be pleafed ; and attended very much to what I mentioned of their hufbandry. He laid, that I had feen fuch great things at the Count de Roncellen's, that every thing, he could (hew me., would appear fmall; tho' he had fome improvements, which perhaps I might like to fee, as I appeared to be fond of agriculture. He then told me, that for twenty years he attended the government of Sweden, as a fe- nator, and was long anxious to oppofe a party, that feemed determined on the ruin of their country ; but finding, after a ftruggle of many years, that the voice of prudence and moderation was fo little liftened to, he took a long farewell of them, and retired to this eflate, determining to make a country life, which wasbeforeonlyaceflation from bufinefs, the only bufinels of his life; and lince he took that refblution, he has adhered to it without once quitting it; and from the factions, which liave arifen fmce his departure, he has had contifuial reafon to rejoice at the determina- tion. He has found, in the obfcurity of theic mouu- S W E D E N. 9 mountains, a fatisfadion, whicll the bufieft fcenes of Stockholm could never give. He applied himfelf to the ftudy and pradice of agriculture with great eagernefs,: and has always taken uncommon pleafure in trying various, experiments on different articles of culture, to difcover the moft profitable appli- cation of the ground ; and he has found, that the only way for aSwedifh nobleman to be rich, ortoimprovehis income in a manner that may bring no regret with his wealth, is the im- provement of his eftates. Nothing is fo pro- fitable, nor any thing, in Sweden at leaft, fb honourable. He has been much ridiculed for giving up an attention to the government of his country, to retire and pafs his days among peafants and boors. " But experience has told me," added M. de Verfpot, " that my choice has been right ; for I have increafed my wealth at the fame time, that I have improved the happlnefs of my life."' This account, which he gave me in a pleallng candid man- ner, fiiewed me at once, that his ideas were congenial with thofe of the illuflrlous Ron- cellen. He did not carry me to his improvements that day; but after breakfaft he took a walk with me, which lafted till dinner ; in which I viewed the grounds around his houfe, the fitua- fO TRAVELS THROUGH Situation of which is one of the moft romantic, 1 ever beheld. It is a very large quadrangular building around a court, fituated on the fide of a vaft mountain, near the bottom, but not fo low, as not to command a great view in front : a large track of falling ground parts the houfe from a very beautiful lake, four miles long, and one and an half broad, in which are leveral lofty iflands, covered with wood, in one of whi^li M. de Verfpot has built a fummer-houle, delicioufly fituated : on the other lides of this lake, the country is extremely various, either irregular vales, or hills rifuig very boldly, and in general covered thick with wood : the whole country belongs entirely to him for feveral miles every way.-: on the fide of one of the hills, lefs fteep than the reft, he has built a new village, of above "feventy houfes; which being raifed of a white lione, has a moft chearful and enlivening ap- .pearaiice. In the lake he has a fmall fhip of two mails, carrying ten brafs cannon ; three floops, and various boats ; all which add un- commonly to tlie beauty of the Icene. In a w^ord, it put me more in mind of a nobleman's ornamented feat, in a wild part of Britain, than any place, I had feen, fince 1 left Eng- land. We rambled for fume miles about this fine, wild, and romantic fcene; and returning to _^^.W EDEN, u to dinner, Madam de Verfpot aiked me, how I liked Ravefburg ? I replied, I thpught it the moll beautiful, and at the fanae time, the mod romantic place I had ever feen in my life. At which complimeat, tho' indeed the mere unaffected; idea I had of the place, (he feemed pleafed ; and I thought her huiband very fortunate, in having a lady that could reli^ thefe forts of country beauties, and enr joy a rural life, as well as the gaieties of the M. de. Verfpot lives in a very plentiful, ai)d gt the fame time, elegant flile.— — His table is fpread with a][} the delicacies, which art caii procure in this northern climate ; he has all the fineft wines in Europe, and his lake fur- iiiihes him: with admirable fi(h"His eftabliih- ment may be gueffed, when I mention his having above feventy menial fervants in the houfe, one of whom has the title of captain of the guard, after the cuflom of Sweden, who has a table, at which is his fecretary, and two chaplains; and befides this, there are five other tables kept; at the loweft of which, all the peafants, who pieafe to come, are indifcriminately admitted ; and their numr her is very often great, even to fome bun-- dreds ; but that is only on feftivals : how- ever, fome take advantage of the admiffion ^very day in the vear. The houfe was bnilt by ii TRAVELS THROt^GH by himfelf from the ground, and the fituatlon, as I before mentioned, moft judicioufly cho- len. The apartments are amazingly nume- rous, and many of them very large; I think^ it is the largeft houfe belonging to a fubjedt, which I have any where feen : there is a fuite of eleven rooms, fronting the lake, not one of which is lefs than 40 feet long by 30 broad ; they are all well furniflied, each with two chimney-pieces in the Englifh tafte, though floves are at each end of the room ; and in all thefe floves, and chimnies, as well as in every room in the houfe, are conftant fires all winter. I am convinced, that in fuch a fa- mily as this, the depth of winter would be the feafon to enjoy the hofpitality of the owner. My only doubt is, whether they have a fociety collected, fufficient to make that dreary feafon plafs pleafantly. In the morning, M. de Verfpot made feve-. ral enquiries of me concerning various objedls, which I had examined in my travels in Flan- ders, Germany, and Denmark ; when I de- fcribed to him the encourageme^its, all the ufe- •ful arts had lately met with in the laft of thofe countries : he faid, that formerly the Swedes much excelled the Danes in every thing; they were equally fuperior in war, commerce, and agriculture; but fince fadion has ufurped . the SWEDEN. 13 the reins of the government, the kingdom hath in all things much declined. I replied, that the natural advantages of Denmark were, for the fize of the territory, greater than thofe of Sweden, the climate warmer, and no mountains in the whole kingdom, but what might be cultivated to the very tops ; whereas in Sweden, the mountains occupy an amazing ihare of the whole kingdom, and the climate is much feverer. All that, faid he, is very true ; but what is the amount of the plains of Denmark in fpace, compared to thofe of Sweden ? we have twenty acres to their one ; and tho' our mountains cannot be cultivated, yet they in timber, iron, copper, pitch and tar, prove as valuable as the plains ; and tho' our climate is much colder than that of Denmark, yet that is of no eflential confequnce, as we can raife every prbdud:, that is to be met with in Denmark. I acknowledged the juftnefs of thefe re- marks. Sir, faid he, Denmark exceeds ns in no- thing, but the encouragement given by the crown in- favour of ufeful undertakings ; whereas the. cafe is very different in Sweden. We have had our encouragements too, but the mifchief is, they have bee;i calculated more foi^. r4 TRAVELS THROUGH for the advantage of the eflates of the fenatdrs, than for that of the people at large. Upon my making enquiries concerning the obje£l of his rural improvements, he anfwer* ed, I will (hew you, to-morrow morning, a large track of cultivated country, near this houfe, which, when I came to the ellate, was all wail:e ; my great objed has been, to bring thefe wafles fnto improvement. My property in thefe wilds is fo extenlive, that two lives, longer than mine, would be too fhort td improve them all, but I am not idle. I keep improving — doing that land firft, that lies neareft to my dwelling. I am not an enemy to Woods, provided they are duly regulated, and that they are confined to land, which is improper fbr corn and grafs. Our firs and pines thrive as well, or I think rather better, dn almoft inacceffible mountains and fteeps, than on plains, and more level ground : to the former, therefore, I confine them ; and in the management of them, I am attentive al- ways to thin my woods, inflead of deflroying the whole growth, which is the cuftom of this country. If an acre of land has thirty trees on it, that will turn out profitable to cut; the general way of the country is to cut down all, to take away the beft, and reducQ the reft to aflies, for manuring the land; the con-. SWEDE N. 15 confequenee of which management is, the land fo cleared, being a long while before it is agatn cbyered with a good growth, and never, with any dqual to what was before upon it ; thia is owing to a want of fhelter. While the ground is half or three fourths covered, the young trees are well iheltered, and you have a continually thriving crop. There fliould not be more than from five to ten trees taken out in ^ year, from an acre of land', according as the foil, &c. may be. By pradifing this me- thod, my woods yield me a very beneficial 1-e^tilar crop ; I carry none but fine trees, which are fure of good price, to market ; and am always in poffeffion of as many acres at one time, as at another, inflead of having large tracks kid wafte by my peafants, which are fornle centuries befo're they recover them- lelves'. Another circumflance, very well un- derfliood in England, but no where elfe, that t have remarked, is, attending to the fences around the woods; I keep all mine in as good order as thofe which furround my corn : cattle love to browze in woods, but the mifchief they do is incredible: upon my fyftem, I de- pend for the regular fupply, on young trees being conflantly on the growth among the old phes; but if cattle had admiflion in the com- mon Way, I Ihould be prefently difappointed h i6 TRAVELS THROUGH in my expedlations : this is one reafbn, why a piece of wafte is fo long, before it becomes covered with a full growth of wood. But I make it a rule, as faft as I advance my improvements, to leave no wafles behind me. All, that are not proper for corn or grafs, I in- clofe, with the fame attention, as my other grounds, and fow them regularly with feeds, fo that they prefently become as good woods, a§ any on my eftate. For other purpofes, than the exportation, or ufe of fine timber, I referve the woods, that are fituated on places, which would admit a profitable culture of corn or grafs ; thefe I root out entirely, as they are wanted; and, as faft as they are clear- ed, cultivate the land. By means of this conduct, all the parts of my eftate, through which I advance my im- provements, are brought into profit : woods indeed, in a country, where they are fo ama- zingly plentiful, will not pay me near ib good a rent, as my cultivated land; but then, all they do pay, is clear profit, for I leave them no where, that corn and grafs could be well cultivated upon. From this converfation of M. de Verfpot, I entertained great exped:ations of feeing many noble improvements, next morning; but he warned me, not to form too great an idea of them. SWEDEN. 17 them.—" You will fee," faid he, ** good common hufbandry, exercifedov^r a large track of land ; but that fight to an Englilhman is nothing; he fees it almoft over a whole king- dom. I am fo unfortunate, as to be at a dif- tance from the fea ; our river, which carries down floats of timber, is of excellent ufe ; but had I the opportunity, which my excel- lent friend Roncellen has, I would attempt to rival him. My eflate would alone, furnifh employment for ten fail of flout fhips for a century to come: had I the conveniency of a port, I fhould form a great exportation of va- rious products, which would be an improve- ment, which nothing elfe can equal." M. de Verfpot ordered an early breakfafl, that we might have the longer excurfion be- fore dinner. I was apologizing for being troublefome to him ; but he faid, — '' You are much miftaken. Sir, fo far from being a trouble, it is giving me the pleafure of a com- panion in my ufual ride, for I am never in the houfe from breakfafl to dinner." In the morning, we mounted, and he con- du6led me about a mile and half through the ornamented environs I mentioned before, and then came into a part of the lands, which he cultivates himfelf. The fituation of the ground was, in general, that of fome gentle Vol. hi. C hills 1^ TRAVELS THROUGH hills and plains, entirely in culture. The fields were all regularly difpofed in fquares or oblongs ; the fences regular and admirable ; and all the gates, rails, &c. very good and neat, and all painted white, very much hi the manner and appearance of many ornamented farms, I have feen in England. The inclo- fures were in general of twenty or thirty acres. The foil is a light loam upon a rock or flinf, of various depths, but leldom lefs than fix inches. M. de Verfpot obferved, that the depth was not of any material confe- quence, except for carroty, turneps, and fome other roots; yet thofe crops yield abundantly in only fix inches depth, tho' not fo greatly as when deeper. The fields were covered with wheat, barley, oats, peas, beans, buck- wheat, carrots, turneps, clover, trefoil, &c. and many of them in natural grafs. The crops were all exceeding vigorous, and fupe- rior to any thing in appearance, not only that I had lately feen , but alfo to moil:, that I recol- ledled having taken any notice of in England. I exprefled my furprize, that this northern latitude fhould admit the crops, which I then law. " Sir, laid he, I do not wonder at your opinion ; 1 have heard it from feveral, and read much the fame ideas in many books; nothing fo common as, in the defcription of countries, to SWEDE N: 19 to read of the climate being fo fevere, that the inhabitants mujfl live only on fifhing and hunting, or produces only a few oats; twen- ty books, in my library, tell me, that wheat will not fucced higher in Sweden, than the fixtieth degree of latitude. I am convinced, that the bounty of Providence is fuch, that all kinds of corn, pulfe, and roots, which are now on my farm, will grow every where ; the great thing is to confult the nature of the climate in the mode of culture. In Sweden, our winters are extremely fe- vere, and they come with but little interven- tion of autumn ; they likewife go away fud- denly, without fuch a gradation of fpring, as you have in England: Ipring^and autumn, you muft well know, are, in warmer climates, the principal feafons for mofi: of the operations of tillage : we are not totally without them, as fome authors affert, but their duration is very fhort. As foon as the fun has thorough- ly thawed the earth, and it is in order for til- ' lage,thatis the time to fow,v/hich is evidently evinced by the immediate vegetation, feen in all plants: the peafants follow this idea ver}^ well ; but the great objeil is the preparation of the land, in the little autumn we have. The field, which theyfowin Ipring, never had any tillage, (ince the preceding crop ; fo that C 2 the 20 TRAVELS THROUGH the produ6ls are fmall, not from the fault of the land, but for want of better tillage. The power of the fun, coming after the frofts of winter, with the one ploughing they give their fields, fets all the weeds loofe; and they vegetate with vigour, like every thing elfe ; oftentimes to the deftruftion of the crop. But my method has ufually been to be very expe- ditious; the moment harveft is over, I plough up all my flubbles, before the froft catches me : by this means, when it comes, it has the greater efFe^l: ; but the principal ufe of it is, the feeds and roots of wheat vegetating, before I plough and fow in the fpring, which they will not a tenth part do, if the land was not fl:irred in autumn; by turning them In, at the fame time, that I fow my corn, they are kil- led, and the crops fucceed as clean, as you now fee them." This conduct flruck me very much, as it appeared at once to be founded, uot only in experience, but good fenfe. Upon my afk- ing him, if he thought ploughing up of ftub- bles in autumn, would be a good pracStice, where the fame inducement did not hold equally flrong, that is in milder climates, fuch as England?" -"There is not, replied he, the fame reafon for it, becaufe your ipring al- lows you to plow your land as often as you pleafe, SWEDEN. 21 pleafe, before you fow, confequently the iveeds may be deftrojed : yet I fhould follow the rule even in that climate; becaufe by plough- ing before winter (for which likewife you have whatever time you want) the frofts will have much more power over the foil, in break- ing and fweetening it ; fo that lefs tillage would do in the fpring, and the weeds alfo grow rnuch more, w^hich will render it fo much the e^iier to kill them." — What the praftice of our Englifh farmers is in this cafe, I do not know : but it appears to be a point pf confiderable importance. As we rode through the fields, the crops of which made fo fine an appearance, M. de Verfpot obferved,thatofallhis grain, nothing- paid him better than wheat; tho' among the common farmers, they are much inclined to think that oats anfwer as well, from the large- nefs of the produce, Vv'hich is much greater than wheat. My oat crops generally yield ■ me five or fix quarters an acre ; my barley, rather more than four; wheat yields two and an half; peas as much; beans four; and buck- wheat four. Thefe crops leemhig to me to be very confiderable, I aiked hira, if he did not p^anure very richly for them ; and how he ma- naged in this refpe6t, as he did not ule wood- alhes in the large quantities of the comiiTs,an fai risers? C ^ I de^ tt TRAVELS THROUGH " I depend, replied he, entirely upon dung, formed into compofts with the earth, I dig in draining marflies. I have two ftrong reafons againft the praftice, common among the pea- fants, of manuring with fuch quantities of wood-afhes ; firft, they fpoil, for ages, large tracks of wood land, for they not only carry away all the a{hes, but all the furface of the foil with them; and I find my woods too pro- fitable to deftroy, without, at the fame time, gaining either grafs or arable in the room of them :. fecondly, they depend fo much on thefe afhes, that they are apt to negle£l the article of cattle, as they can manure their lands without them : but I think it an infi- nite lofs, not only to themfelves, but to the •whole kingdom, to adopt any fyftem, that lef- fens the general ftock of cattle; I think, they form the mofl profitable part of huibandry ; and at the fame time, that they are of this im- portance to the farmer, in the profit they yield, they are to the ftate the foundation of the manufactures of wool and leather, which in all countries are of fuch confequence. Nor do their benefits ftops here ; for our corn fields are hidebted to them for the finefl crops, tliat cover them. Did the peafants depend on their dung alone for manuring, they would keep more cattle, and then their general hufbandry would SWEDEN. 23 ^would be much improved. In allmy improve- ments, when I proportion the quantities of each crop to the reft, J make the firft foun- dation of fuch an arrangement, the quantity of dung I fiiali want; I then provide food for fuch a number of cattle as will, I know", yield me the requiiite quantity of dung. I have carried this idea into pra6lice thefe many years, and always found it uniformly profit- able.'* Upon my enquiring further into this f^^- tem, he went on " A very little attention would enable our peafants to conceive the full extent of this management, and a6l accord* ingly. They all of them keep their cattle, and know well enough bow to crop their fields for the maintenance of them, fo that they would only have to proportion their ground to a greater number. They all of them feel the advantage of keeping cows, hogs, oxen, and many of them iheep ; they find nothing of a readier fale, and in many fituations, they are the only commodities, which, for want of roads, can be brought to market. And tho* our winter is very long, and the maintenance ofthematthat feafbn troublefome and expen- five, yet there are few cold climates, thatpro-^ duce better crops for keeping them ; and it is in the winter alone, that the dunghills are C 4 made 24 TRAVELS THROUGH made, which are of fuch great value to all our crops. Our Swedlfh turneps, of which we have two forts, is a moft valuable crop; when prepared for, by fufficient ploughings and ma- nure, it yields a vaft produce, which will keep found through the fharpefi winter : for the fake of tilling my land, and being able to get at the crop at all times, I generally lay them vip in barns, fo as to be very handy for feed- ing all forts of cattle on the fpot. We have the plants which you in England callthekales, that is, cabbages, which do not turn in with hard heads, but are all compofed of open leaves; thefe vegetate all winter through, and the fnows muft be uncommonly deep, to pre- vent our getting at thera. Carrots, I lay by in flores, in the fame manner, as turneps: then we have plenty of hay and ftraw, in common with other countries ; fo that I muft confefs, I fee no reafon for our complaing in Sweden, nor any difficulty, which our induftrious far- mer can find, in providing for the moft nume- rous herds of cattle. An acre of turneps or carrots will winter- feed four cows, if they have a good portion of hay, and as much flraw as they like ; but without any hay at all, they will keep three; which is very confider- able, and fhews, what may be done by a Ipi- rited induftry. Our kale grows into fuch fine crops, SWEDEN. 25 crops, that, with ftraw, an acre of It will winter fix fheep ; fwine are kept in the moil: advantageous manner poflible on carrots, and even fattened upon them to great profit, But all thefe crops, to be confiderable, ought to be very well tilled and amply manured; and if the peafants are retrained from wood-alhes, and have not any cattle, from whence is this manure to come ? Hence it is, that cattle enable you to keep cattle ; fo that the more they keep, the more they might keep, if the dung is properly applied, " Another great advantage, pofleiTed by all wild countries, is the having great plenty of vegetables, of ufe only for being converted into litter : all our w^afles and our woods yield vaft quantities of weeds, which, mown in their fucculency, make excellent ftraw for littering our cattle aU winter long, vi^hich, in the railing much manure, is an advantage of the moft valuable kind. They are to be gain- ed in almoft any quantities; but our peafants did not fee their interell in this point, as they ought ; moll: of them lay in a few loads, but not a tenth part fufficient to make as much dung as they might. I keep all my cattle littered up to their bellies, the whole winter through; by which means, my dung- hills enfure me the greatefl crops, of which the i6 TRAVELS THROUGH the land is capable of yielding. So that I am confident, there is no abfolute occafion forfqch •quantities of wood afties, as the Swedifh pea- sants fo much depend on." From the view I had of M. de Verfpot's fields, as well as from his converfatiori, I was extremely clear, that no man could know bet- ter than he, how to raife great crops of all forts; but I defired to know, where he found a market for his produ£ls, for I found, he had four thoufand acres in his own hands. '' I do not, replied he, meet with any diffi- culty in that point ; my improvements in huf- bandry, and in ornamenting the lands around my houfe, with the number of people that inhabit it, all together form a very confider- able confumption, and the reft is fold by my agents to whoever will purchafe : much is bought, to fupply the miners in the moun- tains; and yet more finds its way down the river by Tuna, and fo to fea, to the towns upon the coafl:. If I had a port, fo conveni- ently fituated, as to make it advifeable to keep {hipping of my own, I fhould be able to gain a much higher price ; but as I meet at pre- fent with rates, that anfwer very well to me, and I have neither trouble nor chances, I am contented; but if the people on my eftate in- creafe in future, as they have done lately, the whole SWEDEN. 27 whole country will find a market at home, fuperior to any thing they can get abroad. " And from the experience I have had in this point, I have great reafon to believe, that in- orealing population brings with it every other advantage; and that moft other improvements will followof courfe, provided the population, fo gained, is founded on hu{bandry ; that is, a certainty of food. I have never formed any manufadories, becaufe I was of opinion, that the improvement of the foil was the firfl and mofl profitable bufinefs, the people could be employed in ; and that 'till huibandry-im- provements were advanced to the utmoft height, all the hands, employed in the ma- nufa6lures, were fo much lofs to the fl:ate. " This reafoning, Iknow, I am particular in ; it will give offence to you, and would give yet more to a Frenchman. But whether I am right or wrong, is not a point of any con- lequence, fince they generally eflablifh them- felves without your affiftance. The number of people, I have drawn together for different works, have formed manufactories; the ready market this population carries with it, has induced feveral undertakers to fix fome fabrics in my villages; there are fome of woollen cloth, of leather, linen, hats, and hardware : they are not, it is true, confiderable; but they are 2% TRAVELS THROUGH ^re proportioned to the demand, and popula- tion has created them. ; and I have no doubt, but they will increafe, as the population of my eftate increafes. Thus you may depend upon it in all cafes, that if you work fuch improve- ments in agriculture, as greatly increafes the number of people, luch improvements will themfelves do all the reft ; they will eftablifh manufaftures, and bring commerce, when they arrive at a certain degree, and wealth proportioned muft be the confequence. Nor Ihould we forget, that when thefe kind of ad- vantages take place of themfelves, and gra- dually, we ma}? be fure, they are natural, and permanent, and not exotics, planted by an an- xious hand, and cherifhed by an unremitting attention : fuch muft be more valuable, and always more certain in their nature and con- fequences; and conclude from hence, that the folicitude, difcovered at prefent in feveral parts of Europe, for eftablifliing manufac- tories is either unneceilary or improper : if their policy is found, manufactures will come ofcourfe; if they do not come, it is proot fufficient, that they ought not, as the hands, which they would employ, ought to be advanc- ing the foil to its utmoft improvement, before ^ny thing is done in fabrics." I made SWEDEN. 29 I made fome obje£lions to this opinion, drawn froiTi the example of England and Holland ; but they were not of confequence enough to infert here. M. de Verfpot wefit on -'' In converfing with feveral noblemen in Sweden, on the fubjedl of im- proving their eftates, the moft general diffi- culty, I have heard of, is the getting hands; but from my own experience I am clear, that this is an imaginary evil. No country could be more defolate, or worfe inhabited than this, when I began my undertaking of im- proving it; but by proteding and encouraging them, building houles immediately for all, that would fettle, and employing them con- ftantly at a fair price for their labour, they would any where command, whatever num- bers they wanted, and increafe them, as quickly as they pleafed to any height. I am convinced, that for increafing the population of any country, nothing more is wanting, than the improvement of land." Having viewed a confiderable part of the farm, we returned to dinner; and fpent the remainder of the day in converfing on thefe fubjedts. I found him quite enthufiaftical in favour of agriculture ; but muft fay, that I believe he would not, if he had the diredion of the affairs of Sweden, carry thefe ideas exclu- fively 30 TRAVELS THROUGH {ively too far, and negleft manufadtures and commerce too much. The next morning, he carried me over a different part of his farm, and fhewedmethe improvement of a very large ncarfh, by drain- ing. It was converted into a very profitable meadow. He alfo carried me through a field of experiments, of fifty acres, wherein he tries every thing, that is of dubious fuccefs, before he extends the culture through his whole farm : here he brings the recommen- dations of various writers to the tefl, to fee what truth there is in their aflertions : he is now trying fome artifical graffes, not yet com- mon in Sweden, particularly fainfoine, efpar- eette, lucerne, and cytiffus, of all which he had fmallparcels,but he did not feem to fpeak favourably of them, from what they had hi- therto promifed. He had alfo under culture feveral plants from Siberia, and different forts of wheat, to fee, which would agree befl with the climate. Here was alfo a fet of trials upon dung, in order to dilcover what was the proper quantity for an acre of land. I muft own, that this field pleafed me better than any one I had ever viewed in my life. M. deVer- fpothere gained mofl of his knowledge. — the culture of it is immediately under his own in- fpedion — nothing is done here, without he is prcfcnt ; SWEDEN, 31 prefent ; and by repeating and varying his trials, he is able to decide in every inftance, what beft fuits the foil and climate. He ob~ ferved to me, that no farmer fhould be with- out a piece of ground, which he dedicates to this ufe ; otherwife, he muft either give up all idea of any improvements , or elfe try them upon too great a fcale at firfl ; which, if they are unfuccefsful, would be injurious to him : a remark, which is certainlyjuft. — The evening of this day was alfo ipent in converfatlon, which I found very inflrudlive. The 6th, I took my leave of him, after ex- preffing how much I was obliged to him for my reception at Raverfburg, and inviting him, in cafe he fhould ever come into Eng- land again, or any of his friends, to give me an opportunity of returning it, I had enquir- ed of him concerning the northern provinces of Sweden ; and he aifured me, that I Ihould fee nothing in Lapland worth going after ; that as my route was to Peterfburgh, Ihad bet- ter keep pretty near the coaft of the Baltic, through the two Bothnias, down to Finland, and thfough Nyland and Carelia ; in which journey, I fhould have an opportunity of feeing feveral varieties of country and husbandry. CHAP. 32 TRAVELS THROUGH CHAP. II. Hernofand — Fleafing Adventure with a Stve- dljh Peafant — -Htijhandry — Uma — State of commerce — Pith a — Defcription of the country — T'orneo — State of the country in Eajt Bothnia — Admirable Management of a Far- mer— A Swedifh Club — Remarkable Coun- try— Nyflot — IVyburg . I LEFT Raverfburgh the 6th, fetting out for Hernofand on the Baltic, hi the pro- vince of Angermania, the diftance fixty miles, which took me two days, through a country very much like that, about M. de Verfpot, but very differently cultivated: fpots in the vales were occupied by peafants, who all feemed to be little farmers, but they had nothing that flruck me in their management. Hernofand is a fmall ifland in the gulf; is the capital of the province, and has a little trade in iron and timber, and is a port, to which fome fmall craft come, that ply backwards and forwards from Stockholm. It might be of very great advantage, that fo large a part of this king- dom is fituated on the Baltic, and furrounds the S^ W E D E N. 33 the giilf of Bothnia in fuch a manner, that a quick and eafy communication is kept up be- tween province and province, and between them all, and the capital* I know of fcarcely any country, that has the advantage of fuch a navigation, as this gulf, which is furrounded by fo many provinces. The 8th, I reached Scenfio, a little village on the bay of the gulf, the inhabitants of which fupport themfellves chiefly by fifhing ; great quantities of which they dry for their winter provifion ; and there are ibme forts, which, when dried, they pull in pieces, and grind, and then make up in balls of fi(h bread, being mixed with a portion of barley meal. It is a very odd, and I fhould apprehend, a v*Ty unwholefome diet. They have but little idea of hufbandry here; which would make one think, that it is in general carried on in the villages, merely as a means of exigence, by railing food, and feidom, as a trade, where- with to get money, in order to purchafe ne- ceflaries. The peafants, in every part of Swe- den, go to market for fewer commodities, than we, in England, can have any conception of. Their hufbandry, hunting or filhing, feeds them; moft of their cloathing is ©f their own manufacture ; many of them with wooden ihoes of their own making ; fo that fait and Vol. III. D fome 34 TRAVELS THROUGH fome brandy are the chief articles, that many of them purchafe. — This was a journey of near forty miles. — The 9th, I went near as far to get to Grunfud : the country is chiefly peo- pled with fifhermen, but they have more cul- ture among them, than in that of yefterday's route. Many of them have little farms, and feem to be much more at their eafe, than thofe that are mere filhermen. From this place to Una in Weft Bothnia, at the diftance of fe- venty miles, took me a day and a half; the country is pretty well cultivated. I lodged at the houfe of a peafant, who had a fmall farm of his own, and is, I believe, the moft con- tented, happy man in the world. I offered him money; but he would take none, faying, that when he travelled through my country, he dared to fay, I fhould not refufe him a night's lodging, and fome victuals. The honeft man did it from a mere principle of genuine hofpitality. Aloney, faid he, is of very little value to me; my farm fupplies my- felf and my family with moft neceflaries ; and plenty to fell, for the little we want to buy. He had a wife, two fbns, and two daughters; and the whole family feemed animated with the father's fpirit. There was a chearfulnefs, a health, and an adivity in them all, that convinced mc, they were fu- perlatively happy. The employment of the thre^ SWEDEN. 35 three men was to hunt, fhoot, and fifh, and do the mofl laborious works of the huibandry ; the women ploughed and fowed the ground, and did mofl: of the other bufinefs of the farm, that was within their ftrength, and ma- nufadlured woollen cloth for all the family. The fale of their fuperfluities bought them, whatever they wanted to purchafe, fuch as fait, implements, fome linen, &c. and they had money enough always left, after paying their taxes, to lay up fomething againfl emer- gencies. I think this is as compleat arepre- fentation of rural happinefs, as can exift. — This family have nothing to fear. — They are as independent as an abfolute monarch, and much more at their eafe. It was with plea- fure, I entered into the particulars of their living, and found a cottage, that was the conftant refidence of peace and content. It is in fuch fituations and circumftances, that we fhould look for happinefs ; not in towns, nor in the palaces of kings, or the feats. of gentlemen, but in the humble cottage, where no knowledge enters, but what is applied to utility. Una, where I arrived the 21 ft, is one of the mofl confiderable towns in Weil Bothnia. It is fituated on a very fine large river, which falls into the gulf: there is a good harbour for D 2 fhips. 56 TRAVELS T H U O U G FI lliips, and the place has a pretty brllk trade in timber, iron, pitch, tar, &c. and having two or three merchants, of large property, to whom feveral fhips belong, they carry on here a trade with Holland and England, load- ing out with the produ6ls of the countries around the gulf, and bringing home a great variety of commodities, which they fell in all the ports around the Baltic, in Sweden, Ruflia, Livonia, Poland, Pruffia and Germany. It is of very great advantage to a town to be inha- bited by a few fuch extenfive traders; for the profits center in it; they employ their townf- men in their (hipping, and export much more products, than would be done, if it were not for them. Thefe merchants alfo much enrich the place by their fhip-building ; for they have never lefs than three or four on the ftocks at a time: thefe (hips they fell, wherever they can get a market, cargo and all, which they of- ten do to good advantage ; and this I take to be the mofi: beneficial commerce, which Sweden, or any other country, that abounds with plenty of naval ftores, can carry on; for by building fhips for fale, fhe gives the lail: hand in ma- nufacturing all her produ(^s,and confequently employs as many of her people as pofhble ; hut when fhe fells the timber, iron, pitch, &c. i'cparately, the nations, that buy tbem, make this SWEDEN. 37 this lail: profit, which is a very coiifiderable one. No government, therefore, can ever give a wifer bounty, than that of fo much per ton, for all fhips built in a country ; it is the mofl advantageous commerce her lubjecls can carry on. Louis XIV. was certainly well advifed by Colbert to give this bounty; and it was attended with as good effects, as any other meafure in that fuccefsful admini ft ration. It took me two days to reach Scornfay, at the diftance of fourfcore miles. I took up my quarters the firft night at a village, where, for the firft time iince I have been in Sweden, I met with a fet of barbarians : I could per- fuade none of them to let me into their cot- tagesj they were fure I was a fpy from the Mufcovites ; on what errand, or for what purpofes I was come, they could not tell. We were now benighted, and in a road, of which we had no good accounts ; fo 1 found, I was very likely to pafs the night on horfeback : I went from cottage to cottage, but all were pofleffed of the fame idea ; none would be hofpitable. Going yet further, I came to a cottage in a lonely fpot ; I determined here to force an en- trance, and feize the caftle by ftorm, in cale they would not be prevailed on by fair and mild requifitions : but ftiil it was in vain ; D 3 " . they r ^3 TRAVELS THROUGH they had no room for us : tho' we offered to pay for every thing we fhould eat and drink, and for our horfes, yet it had no effect. Igave aflgnal (which I had explained to my men) for one of them to march round, and attack the fortrefs in flank, while I remained to ftorm it in front. The plan was executed in a moment : I drew my piflols, prefented them to the breafl: of the peafant; my men bound him hand and foot ; and we fecured the women and children, tying all their hands behind them, and locking them up in a room, with the poftilion arm- ed as a fentinel over them : then we took poffellion of the manfion, feaffed on the coarfe provifions we found, and I fet up my bed in one of the rooms. I paffed a good night, without any alarm from theprifoners. In the morning, I fet forward on my journey, leaving the in- hofpitable owners of the cottage, bound, till their neighbours clofe to their door, and in fight of the road, fhould accidentally come to their relief. Scornfay is a little town, at the foot of a mountain, with a river running under its walls, near as large as the Thames at Chelfea ; the fliores are very bold, and all covered with wood. I have fcarcely feen a more romantic and ftriking fituation : large (hips come up to the quay, tho' at a confiderable diflance from S VV E D E N. 39 from the fea ; thefe load timber chiefly,, and in general for the Holland market. There are not any merchants of fubftance in the town, and their trade does not feem to be at all regular ; fometimes they have three or four vefTels in port, and they informed me, that, many weeks, none at all were to be From Scornfay, two days journey carried me to Tame, through a country various; but about the villages, there is in general fome cultivated land, enough to feed and maintain the inhabitants, and to enable them to buy of the fhipping, what they wanted, which their own foil could not furnifh. There are no fhops or pedlars upon this coafl:, except in the more conliderable towns: all the peafants and in- habitants buy what they want out of fmall floop traders, which make annual voyages up the gulf of Bothnia from Stockholm, This place is in 6^ degrees of latitude ; and yet I per- ceived no change in the climate, or in the huf" bandry . They cultivate the fame plants, as are to be feen to the fouthward, and apparently with the fame fuccefs. Probably, the increafed length of day, proportioned to the degree of north latitude, enables them to cultivate the crops of the fouthern latitudes. Barley is a tender grain, and more congenial to thecli- D 4 ■ mate 40 TRAVELS THROUGH mate in Spain than any other ; yet they have good crops of barley here ; and I am afliired, they alio fbw it with fuccefs in Lapland ; (o that thefe moft ufeful plants are, by Provi- dence, fent to almoft all countries. The 36th I got to Pitha, the diftance near thirty miles, through a country, in general of a marihy foil, which fome of the pcafants have converted, by draining outfpots, into profitable meadows; and indeed, I have feen in few places more induftry,than is apparent in thefe people. Upon the drier riling grounds they have crops of turneps and kale for their own and their cattle's winter provifion, the meadows af- fording them nothing at that feafon. They keep large herds of fwine, and feed them in winter on regular truflbs of boiled roots, mixed with fmall quantities of peas ; and they feem to reckon their hogs among the principal articles of their wealth. Pitha is a pleafant little iea port, tolerably well built ; at which they carry on a fmall coaftnig trade, and export fome timber, &c. I met with a better inn here, than I had done for a long while before, and a very civil, in- telligent landlord. He gave me for my fupper an excellent difli of fifh, and a piece of very tender good venifbn, with fome French w'ine, than which I had drank \\ oiic. All this made dell. SWEDEN. 4t delicate fare, compared with what I met with at the peafaiit's ; and my reckoning was very reaibnable. I alked the landlord fomequeftions about the prefent ftate of the town, and the neighbouring country. He faid it was a poor town, and flill a poorer country; that if it was not for a little (hipping, now and then, they would have no fuch thing as money among them. He faid trade declined, and there was no prolpedl of feeing things better. He entered into a long differtation upon the politics of the times, and was deep read, I found, in the Stockholm gazette. My next day's journey, the 27th, was to Lula,- another fea port town, ilanding on the mouth of a very fine river, which is navigable a good way, and comes far, from the inner parts of Lapland, &c. Here is a brifker coaft trade carried on than at Pitha, becaufe the in- land navigation is much more confiderable. They have (hips very often from Stockholm, which bring various commodities in exchange for the products of thefe provinces, which confift of timber, pitch and tar, and many furs; which find a good market in the capi- tal. They are fometimes vifited by Englifh and Dutch fhips, which they reckon highly advantageous to them ; and from the appear* ance of their flocks of timber, I fhould think them 42 TRAVELS THROUGH them very well provided for loading any fhips whatever. They have one or two pretty coii- fiderable merchants among them, who build fhlps ,here, then load them with tim- ber, and nej^t, fend fhip and cargo to be fold in Holland, upon commiffioh. The profits of this, they faid, are not great ; but when their feamen are out of employment, and they have the opportunity of building cheap, it pay$ them fomething for their trouble and The 28th', I fet out for Torneo, through a country very wild and mountainous, with but few villages jn it ; and as to a gentle- man's feat, I had not fecn. one for feveral days. They have fomie appearance of culti- vation around their cottages ; but it is only for their own fubfiftance : there is enough, however, to fhew, that high as the latitude of this country is, (it is about 66^) it would produce plentifully for a numerous people ; but it is very thinly inhabited. Through all the provinces of Sweden that I have yet tra- velled, I am convinced, that the principal caufe of the country being fo thinly inhabited, is the fmall number of firmers ; there being only peafants, with land enough round their cottages, for the fubfiftance ; of the people within them. Many of tliefe httle fpots belong SWEDEN. 43 belong to them ; and none of their children will ever brook the living in a worfe man- ner, than their fathers did, which feems to be a prevalent idea amongft them : fb that a family, in this fituation, are fure to leave but one reprefentative, unlefs fome gentleman builds cottages, and gives away his land around them, which, it may eafily be ima- gined, is not very common. This prevents marriages among the fons; for, as they can- not have their own cottages and lands, they live at home unmarried, with the brother who inherits : thus little or no increafe hap- pens, unlefs by mere accident. But if all thefe peafants lived in hired cottages, with- out any land, and the country was cultivated by great farmers, who could afford to pay them money for their labour, the farmers would grow ten times the produce, which is now produced, and export all, that was not confumed ; which would be a conflant mo- tive to them to increafe their bufinefs, and, of courfe, to fix their fons in other farms. In the cafes of fome patriotic perfons, who have made improvements in hufbandry, and built houfes, we found, before, that the people in- cfeafed as fafl: as could be wifhed. Torneo flands better than any other town ^n the gulf, for the trade of Lapland, which is 44 TRAVELS THROUGH is not inconfiderable in furs, fbme of which are very valuable. It lies near three con- siderable rivers, which flow through all Swe- dish Lapland, and open a fmall commerce with Norway and Mufcovite Lapland; fo that at Torneo I found more fhipping, than I had feen at any place, I had lately been at on this lea. Ships come from Stockholm hither, laden with all forts of neceffaries for thefe northern provinces, and carry their produ6ls back in return. Hence the town is tolerably well built, the ftreets broad and flraight, and very well paved, and fbme of the merchants, of which there are a good number, very rich. They build' ^*iips, and iit them out on trading voyages, and make every effort to employ their money fo, as it may bring in good in- tereft ; but, with all their endeavours, they are not able to increafe the trade of the place, further, than what the fame men could carry on at any other; which is owing to a want of population, and wealth in the country be- hind them; fo that they are much limited in the commodities, they export, and alio in the quantity of thofe, they import. And indeed, it is generally found, that agnculture, well purfued, mufl increafe the people very much; manufadures will next arife, to fatlsty their greatefl wants ; and then comes commerce, to SWEDEN. 45 to fupply the reft. This is the natural chain, and it is in vain to think of breaking or re- verfing it. July 31ft, I left Torneo, and reached Coy- rannum, a little town on the coaft, which is fubfifted chiefly by fifhing. The inhabitants, in the moft northerly parts of the two Both- nias, have a different appearance from the Swedes in the ibuthern provinces of the king- dom ; they are lefs informed, of a ihorter ftature, and more irregular in their drefs, many of them, lewing together the ikins of foxes, and other wild creatures, whofe furs are not of value, and make their cloathing, in a much rougher and more ordinary manner; nor are they fo intelligent or comprehenfive ; but they are a very limple and harmlefs peo- ple, and appear to be very humane. I found moft of them, exceedingly refpe<5lful and civil. Their ordinary falutation is not bow- ing like the Swedes in other parts : thefe countrymen take hold of your right-hand, and lay it over their left, making ftrange faces at the fame time. The next town, of the leall confequence, is Salo, which carries on a very fmall trade, as they informed me ; the dis- tance is near eighty miles, which I performed in two days. And here let me fay a word or two in praife of die little Dalecarliaa horfes, which 46 TRAVELS THROUGH which have brought me with fuch expedition through fome of the moft dangerous roads in Europe, and withoutoncehavingfailedus, tho* fix in number; and I think, they look as well, as before they fet out on a journey of fo many hundred miles. I have fo great a value for them, that I am determined to carry them to England; and I am now fo accuflomed to the hard exercife of riding thirty or forty miles a day, that I feel not the leafl: inconvenience from it. Augufl the 2d, I got to Salo ; the country, through which I travelled, not mountainous, being in general a plain, riling into fmall hills; much of it well cultivated; and, what furprized me, by farmers, who hire of the landlords, confiderable tracks of land : their chief riches are cattle; they have large droves of black cattle, many fheep, and numerous herds of hogs. The method, in which thefe farmers pay their labourers, the peafants, is in kind : thofe, who attend the flieep, have fo many kept for them with the farmers ; the hogs the fame; and the men, who take care of the cattle, have fome cows kept for them. The landlords rent is paid in corn and cattle. All this is neceflary, in a country, where mo- ney is amazingly fcarce. They fow wheat, and all the other forts of grain, pulfe and roots. SWEDE N. 47 roots, which I have feen in other parts of Swe- den; tho' I do not think, their crops are fo good, as in mountainous tracks; which, I ap- prehend, is for want of equal fhelter, and the ibil not being fo good as in fmall vales, that receive the walh of many mountains. The turnep and carrot crops, with fields of kale, they cultivate, I was informed, more to the north, than any place where I have been ; which fhews how valuable thefe plants are for fupporting themfelves and their cattle. There are fome (hip loads of different forts of provifions,that go every fummer from Salo, for Stockholm and the fouthern parts of the Baltic; they do not get money in return, but fuch manufactures and commodities, as they want. My next route was to Nicarlby, a little "fea port town, with fbme trifling commerce, near ninety miles from Salo. I did not get there till the 5th, twice taking up my lodging with very hofpitable farmers. One of them, at a little village called Kohinglens, was much fu- perior in his ideas, and in his hufbandry, to any thing I had feen of late; and this was a pleafing ciroumftance to me, as I got to his houfe early in the afternoon. I took a walk with him through the fields, nearell: to his dwelling; and the accounts, he gave me, ap- peared 48 TRAVELS THROUGH peared very rational. His crops were all verj fine and clean ; and I obferved, that his corn fields were very numerous, and of large ex-- tent, fpreading over feveral hills within fight; the fize of his farm exceeding in the whole a thoufand acres, and a great portion of it un- der culture. He gets two quarters of wheat an acre, and fometimes more, three quarters of barley and beany, ''arid fometimes four of oats; and his root crops all appeared very good. He told me, there were feveral other farms in the neighbourhood, and that all of them belonged to the baron Bothmer, who refided conflantly at Stockholm; that money was fo fcarce in this country, that the other tenants paid the agent in kind for rent ; but he finding that this was a great lofs to them, from the low prices, at which the products were reckoned, thought of paying in money; and this he planned, from having once ufed the fea. All the produ6ls of their farms were afi double the price, at Stockholm, to what the landlords agents allowed for them. This in- duced him to buy a floop of fifty tons, and to hire a couple of failors, to try a voyage to Stockholm in September, carrying a loading of wheat, barley, pork, beef, mutton, wool, furs, &c. and made it up with timber. The experiment turned out as he could wifh: he kept SWEDEN. 49 k&pt his (loop, perfuaded one of the failors to live with him on (hore, as well as aboard, and made an annual trip upon the fame bufi- iiefs for feverai years, paying his rent in mo- ney. He found this Icheme fo very advanta- geous, that, as his Kufbandry inereafed, by improving the bad and wafte lands of his farm> he found, he could load his veflbl twice with the marketable produce of his farm, befides what he difpofed of in the neighbour- hood ; and he has now inereafed it to three voyages, which he makes regularly every year, and he himfelf fells the cargo. He has built a kind of flied over a dry dock, where he lays up his floop, and is very careful of her. Shewill not hold out many years longer; how-- ever, he propoles buying one of 80 or 100 tons,findingthe method he purfues, of fo much confequence to his profit ; for this ready fale of his products enables him every year to make improvements. He has, fince he adled thus, improved a piece of the wafte belonging to his farm every year; which he will conti- nue to do, until all is in culture. I ihould ob- ferve, that his farm lies remarkably well for executing this work ; for it is all on the fea coaft ; and there is a fmall creek runs up into a pent, near his houfe, which has depth of water, fufficient for a fhip of two hun- VoL. Ill, E dred '50 TRAVELS THROUGH dred tons; but, at the fame time, that he en- joys this advantage, there are hundreds of other farms, equally well fituated, around the gulf of Bothnia, whereof the farmers have no notion of making fuch an ufe. *_ Lmuft remark, that this inftance is a proof, isrnong many others of a different nature, of the great confequence of a regular market for the farmer in all countries to depend upon. This a£live and enterprizing man ftruck out ib- original a way of difpofing of his produdts, merely for want of a market at home : had he been poffeffed of that, he certainly would not have been at the expence of finding one, at la great a diftance. Thus improvements in huf^ bandry are not at their highefl value, nor indeed can be undertaken in their due extent, without a rxiarket, for the products fo raifed, being gained. There are many ways of obtain- ing it: the increafe of population, caufcd by the improvements, takes fome; manufaftures, to the full amount of the people's wants, pro- vide more mouths, which carry off another large portion ; and then commerce muft be brought in, to carry off the remainder; firft, by the number of people fhe fixes on the fpot; and fecondly, by exportation : then the having gained a full market for all, that can be pro- duced, is fuch an encouragement to the clafs> ■who S W E D E l^r. 51 whd cultivate the foil, tliat thej will neceffa- rily carry their improvements very far : Not fo far, however, as they are capable of going, without being puflied on by encouragement and example from thofe above them. Of this truth, we fee inftances every day, in the coun- tries befl: peopled, and in general beft culti-^ vated, and where all the produds of the lands fell at as high prices as any where elfe. Thus in England, what confiderable tracks of land are at this day, as wild as if they were in the latitude of Lapland, and amounting, accord- ing to the accounts of many knowing per- fons, to a feventh part of the kingdom ? With "US no encouragements, no markets are want- ing. What therefore fliould be the reafon of fuch a ftrange negledl ? It can be owing to nothing, but the ignorance and obftinacy of our lower fort of people, who will not be perfuaded, that any land can be good for ufe, that was not cultivated by their forefathers t -and this fupinenefs we find amongll men, who Ihew themfelves lb well qualified in the ma- nagement of land already in culture. There- fore, as none of thefe motives are flrong enough for bringing into cultivation the wafte lands of any county, it is abfolutely neceflary^ that public laws and private endeavours be naade to co-operate ; which cannot be done. 52 TRAVELS THROUGH without making it the interefl: of landlords to undertake and encourage improvements, be- yond that {landing intereft, which the profit of the work always carries with it; for in- flance, it might be advifeable to lay heavy .taxes upon wafte lands, as long as they con- tinued uncultivated ; and, in cafe, any old cuf- toms or rights, fuch as that of commonage upon them, ihould obfl:ru(5l fuch beneficial laws,, then to abolifh all fuch antient culloms, and allow every man to indole, and do, what he thought befl, with every part of his own property. There are many other means, which might be put in execution, in order to pufh on all men to a vigorous refolution to improve the waftes belonging to them ; and if the fub- jedi was confidered, with any degree of atten- tion, numerous methods might be found for efie£lually anfwering the purpofe. It is very furprifing, that I fhould not, in travelling i'o many miles upon the fea coafts of Sweden, have met with more inilances af this penetration, than the fingle one of the farmer in queflion. This kingdom has a vafl line of coaft, numerous bays, gulfs that jet far into the provinces, with very many navi- gable rivers; and, at the fame time, that thele opportunities are fb abundant, a vaft track of country lies adjacent to them, in the higheft want SWEDEN. 5- want of them,, and to which they would he of fuch ufe, as to advance the vahie of the lands very confiderably. Surely, this (houid be a very great motive to all the land- lords upon thefe coafts, w^ho reiide upon their eflates, to put in pra(5lice, means fb much at their command, of advancing the value of them. Nicarlby is a place of no great confidera- tion. They told me, it was once a town, that carried on a great trade; but when the Ruffians over-run the province, they burnt it to the ground, and quite ruined feveralof the greateft merchants in it; lince which, it has never recovered its trade, the commerce at prefent carried on here, not being at all confi- derable. It is not however badly built, and the ftreets are regular. The church is fmall, but very neat. They have a trifling manufac- ture of very cgarfe woollen goods, for the fiipply of the neighbouring country; but it does not feem to be in a flourifhing iltua- tion . The 6th, I got to Vero, another little town on the gulf, with an exceeding good port, and a tolerably built quay, which is the only good {ireet in the town. There is a little trade upon the coaft, and to Stockholm, which coniifts principally of timber. There are not E 3 above 54. TRAVELS THROUGH above feyeii or eight hundred fouls in the. place, and it appears tq be but a poor one, Waffay, which I reached the 7th, is a place ,of greater note ; it has more trade ; and fe- veral merchants, tolerably wealthy, Inhabit it, who have fhips of their own, in which they export large quantities of timber ; but they want a home demand, to load their vefiels back again; for the country behind the town, after a few miles, is one continued foreft, without .any cultivated fpots or villages, an4 reaches, from hence quite to the White Sea, through feveral Ruffian provinces, at the dlftance of pear {even hundred miles, and fcarcely anjf inhabitants to be found the whole way. I came accidentally by this knowledge ; for, juft after I had prdered fupper, the landlord of the inn came in to inform me, that in the next room were a fet of gentlemen of the town, aflernbled at a club, who, underlland- jng, there was a ftranger in the houfe, fent their compliments to him, inviting him to ipend the evening with them. I thought, I might as well make myfelf ac- quainted with a Swedifh club, and therefore returned for anfwer, that I fhould be very happy in waiting on them ; but it was my pii§fortune, not to underftand Swedifh, and I had S W E D E .N. $5 had no interpreter but my fervant. They re- plied, that if I "underflood French, they bad one among them, who could converfe with me; if not, defired I would bring my interpreter. This was v^ry well; fb I went to them, and upon my entering the room, they all arofe, and received me after the man- ner of the country. There were nine of them; one, who feemed to be the principal man amongfi them, and who was the gentle- man, that underiiood the French language, was a very corpulent man, who complained of being much affli£led with the gout. I found, h€ was a merchant in the town, who had formerly been captain of a merchant fhip; and I obferved, that they gave him the title of Captain, by way of honour ; tho' I fhould have thought it, for a man of property, ra- ther a reflediion. He was about fifty years old, a lively, talkative fellow, had travelled almoft every part of the world; and as fuch extenfive travelling, tho' aboard a merchant fhip, is very uncommon, in the remote pro- vinces of Sweden, I perceived, they confidered him almofl: as an oracle, and gave way to his opinion in mod points. He craved my name, my country, and my bufinefs in Sweden, tho' in a good-natured way. Upon my fatlsfying him in all thefe particulars, and his informing E 4 his 56 TRAVELS THROUGH his friends of it, I found, I gained much in all their good graces, by thinking their country worth viewing thro' curiofity. The reft of the company appeared to be merchants, cap- tains of fhips, and the better fort of ihop- keepers, but all decently and neatly drefled, and feemed, from the manner in which things were conducted, to be people of fubflance. The worft of their company was their pipes ; they all fmoaked tobacco incefl'antly ; and as the room was but a fmall one, I thought, I fhould have been fufFocated at firft. They made many enquiries after England, and our manners and cuftoms in many particulars; in which I fatisfied them, much to their appa- rent entertainment. I, in my turn, queftion- ed them about the manufactures and comr merce of their town and neighbourhood, and they gave me an account of every thing, they could, and I believe, a very juft one. They faid, the trade of their town was at a very low ebb; that it was too inconfiderable a place, and the country around it too thinly inliabited, to furnifli much trade ; but that tliey traded a good deal all around the Bal- tic, being fatisfied with commerce, where- tver they found it; that they generally load- ed timber for England or Holland, and then got a freight to where-eyer they could; if not oa SWEDEN. 5^ on the merchant's account, to whom theyfent the timber, yet on their own, by taking in a cargo of fuch goods, as they could get off at fome port or other in the Baltic, and never lo- fing any opportunity to fell fhip and all. This commerce, on an average of feven years, pays, they affured me, very poor intereft for their money: now and then, they meet with lucky voyages, that anfwer greatly ; but fbmetimes, they are forced to go from port to port, in England and Holland, before they can fell a cargo, and perhaps at laft, after a great lofs of time, under prime coft and charges ; fb that they fhould not make fuch ventures, were it not, that all their trade depends upon keeping fome ihipping in motion, by forcing things in this manner. The mofl: profitable part of thele voyages is the fale of the fliip, when it happens, and that they endeavour to pufh as much as poffible, tho' at low prices, in order to keep their fhip carpenters toge- ther, by finding them conftant work. One of them fiiid, *' Ah ! Sir, we muft be very induftrioijs, through a long life, before we can make afmall fortune:" which indeed, from the defcription of their trade, I thought true enough. Upon my enquiring after their manufac- tures, they friid, they had none, except a fa- bric 58 TRAVELS THROUGH brie or two of very coarfe woollens, for the peafants wear; and that was carried on, merely becaufe imported goods of that fort were pro- hibited, tho' they could buy them in England, and fell them at Waflay, much cheaper, than their own manufacturers could make them. But, faid they, trade is fhackled and deftroyed by the regulations, prohibitionsand laws lately made; fothatifourgovernorsgoon much long* er, as they have done of late, we fhall have no trade at all; not a fhip to navigate. We could get cargoes of many forts of goods in Eng- land, that would go off well in Sweden, but we are prohibited ; and for no good reafon ; for we fhould not pay for them with money; we could get all with timber, iron, pitch, tar, and hemp. This would keep our {hips em- ployed ; whereas your countrymen, finding, that we do not take your goods, go to the Danes and the Mufcovites. And for that matter, who can blame you ? The fault is all in our government. I CQuld not help fmiling at the warmth of the honefl: merchant who faid this ; and, from what I have, at various times, heard, fmce I left Stockholm, I muft confefs, I do not fee the policy of laws, in relation to trade, which have been lately made in Sweden. The merchants complaining is a inle, very rarely SWEDEN. 5^ tarely a falfe one, to judge by. It may be faid, that thefe traders and captains vifibly concern themfelves with nothing more, than getting freights for their Ihips, and would like any trade, however detrimental to the kingdom, provided it anfwered their purpofes. But in reply to this, it might be obferved, that the ftate of the cafe in queftion ftrikes out all fuch fuppofitions ; for they wanted to trade to a country, againft whom the balance always was, in every period of the mutual commerce; confequently, a fafe and an advan- tageous trade, upon the very appearance of it. They alfo wanted to load their fhips out, as well as home, being equally defirous of carry- ing out their own produds, as bringing home our manufaftures. At the fame time, that thefe unfavourable circumftances appear, the navigation of Sweden is enlarged, and the moft valuable part of all her manufadiures, fhip* building, extended: fo that her eagernefs to make her ftibje6ls manufa(5lui;e every thing for themfelves, was aiming at an impoffibi- lity, and being, in all the intermediate fleps, much too precipitate. Upon my enquiring into the ftate of the country to the eaft of Waffay, they told me, it was one unbounded and almoft uninhabited fpreft ; that no cultivation was to be met with, 6d TRAVELS THROUGH with, till I came to the province of Savolaxia, and that nine villages out of ten in that coun- try were deftroyed by the Ruffians, and the people carried off, and fettled in wafte tracks in Ingria and Carelia, where they were fo well treated afterwards, having good lands -given to every family, houfes built for them, and furnilhed ; cattle given them and im- plements to cultivate the ground with, and at the fame time, no taxes taken of them ; that they found themfelves happier under the Ruffian defpotifm, than under their own free government ; and, as a proof of this, they have drawn away whole villages from our provinces. Upon my enquiring, if it was owing to any evils, attending the climate or foil, or its produds, that fuch a vaft country was in fo wild a ftate; they replied, that, on the contrary, it was a country, which would fupport very numerous inhabitants ; for the foil in the vales, and upon the gentle hills, was fuppofed to be equal to any in Sweden ; and that they had lands, much more to the north, in a ftate of profitable culture; that the forefts are full of very fine timber, which would affift the inhabitants confiderably in all their undertakings: In a word, that much of it was a very dcfirble country, and wanted little, befidcs people to inhabit it. This SWEDEN. 6r This inftance of To large a track of country being uninhabited, and the emigrations to Ruffia, I muft own, made a ftronger impref- iion on me, in disfavour of the prefent go- vernment, than all the circumftances, I had heard before; for I take it to be, of all others, the ftrongeft proof in the world, that there is an effential mifchief, preying in the vitals of a country, when its inhabitants leave it, to fettle in the lands of other potentates. Men, who are brought up to the arts, or to commerce, and are the inhabitants of towns, often emigrate, without a country, being in any refped on the decline, and even without its being a fign of any evil in the government ; becaufe there are always unquiet fpirits, and broken fortunes, in thofe clafles, that will ever be rambling : but for the pea- fan ts to find their lot fo hard, as to quit the country of their fathers, from a prolped of meeting with a better fate in another, and even in an enemy's country, is perhaps, of all other proofs, that could be brought, the llron-geil, to fhew, that a government is very bad, or very badly admlnillred. One in the company, upon feeing me foli- citous in thefe enquiries after thefe tracks of wafle country, faid, " If you are a gentle- man of curiofity in thefe things, you may con- 6^ TRAVELS THROUGH convince yourfelf of it : I have a fmall eflate on the north point of the Holla lake, where are afamily or two, I have fettled on it ; I now and then take an excurfion thither, for the amufement of (hooting and fifhing ; if you will accompany me thither, I will attend you, and, perhaps, I may fhew fome fporting, you will like. I thanked him for this offer, which pleafed me, on the firil mention of it, but I told him, that I feared I fhould be troublefome to him in it, and that if he did not undertake the journey foon, it would not be in my power to accept the kind offer, becaufe I was under a neceffity of travelling fome hundreds of leagues before winter. My good-natured Swede anfwered, that my company, fo far from being a trouble, would be a pleafure to him, and that he would fet out, as foon as I pleafed, as the time was perfe<5tly equal to him; that his friend Mr. Schronburn (in the company) was to go with him, and he be- lieved, fetting out foon, would luit him too; which being aflented to, the 9th in the morning was fixed for our departure. Upon my faying that I was bound for Peterfburgh, they informed me, that I might have the cholceof two roads ; either acrofs Swedifh Fin- land to Abo, if I wanted to fee that province, and then to coafl the gulf of Finland to Pe- terijburg ; SWEDEN. 63 terfburg; or elfe, that I might ftrike down foiith-eaft to Wyburg, and fo to Peterfburg, which would be a very fhort cut. This I faid, I would confider of. I afked Mr. Hir- ,zel (for that was the name of the merchant who made me the offer) how many miles it was to his eftate ? he faid about one hun- dred and twenty, which would be near three days journey, if I was well mounted. He faid, there was a cottage, about forty miles from Waffay, where we could lodge the firft night; but that the fecond muft be fpent on our horfes, for there were no more houfes. This is no great inconvenience, in a climate, that has fuch long days. This point being fettled, we proceeded in our converfation, and fupper relieved me, for a time, fjom the effluvia of their pipes. They had ordered the befl: entertainment, the town could afford: the fifh was the principal, and the beft part; there was alfb wild fowl and venifbn. The wines were tolerable, fbme from Spain, but chiefly Rhenifh ; however, there were three or four in the company, that feemed to pay their addreiTes to a bottle of brandy, more than to any other liquor ; for they had drank it feveral turns, as if it was a common beverage. All the people, in thefe northern kingdoms, are immoderately fond of fpi. 64 TRAVELS TMROtJGH fpiritous liquors: the feverity of a long win'- ter leads them Into it fo much, that they do not eafily leave it off in the fummer, and the excefs to which they carry it, is very prejudicial to their health. After fupper they all took to their pipes again, to my no fmall mortifica- tion ; and pufhing the bottle about pretty brifkly, they were not long, altogether fo clear-headed, as I could have wiftied for, in order, to have gained fbme more intelligence. As it was fettled, that I fhould be in town all the next day, the principal among them, the captain, Invited me to dine with him, and, at the fame time, alked as many of the company, as their avocations would allow. I accepted his invitation, and went accordingly, and found a company of fix or feven ; among whom was a clergyman, an elderly man, of an agreeable afpe(£t ; as he did not iinder- fland French, I was fome time with but little converfation with him; but he aiking me, if 1 fpoke Latin, I was taken by furprize, and after a little confufion, recolleded myfelf enough, to carry on a tolerable converfation with him afterwards, and found him a fen*> fible, modeft man. I alked him his opinion oftheprefent ftate of Sweden, mentioning what had been told me the night before. He faid, the account was a very true one, as to all ^ S W E D E N* 6s all this country: I replied, laws that were ge- neral, miift generally afFe6t the whole king- dom, and be equal every where ; he faid no ; that there were great exceptions in many inftances in favour of the nobility, and their lands. Upon my mentioning the fubftance of fome converfations, I had had with a noble- man of Stockholm (meaning Baron Mifller)^ he faid, that it was partly true, but moftly in reference to the nobility ; and affured me, that in feveral inftances, Sweden v/as in a very indifferent condition. Part of this (as I juft now remarked) is, I believe, true; and,asIhaveelfewhereobferved, there is alfo great appearance of general good, in the regulations and laws lately made for the encouragement of ufeful undertakings ; and, w^hat is yet of more confequence, the appearance of the peafants, &c. and the eafy manner, in which they live, and through moft of the provinces on the other fide the gulf of Bothnia, is a ftrong prefumption, that there is no great degree of oppreffion among them. Therefore, the bad ftate of affairs in the eaflern provinces, mufl beowing, infomemea^ fure at ieaft, to fome local caufes, that have not a general effe(£l. In this I was the more confirmed, from mentioning the very bad ap- pearance, the emigration of the peafants in the Vol. III. F provinces 66 TRAVELS THROUGH provinces- adjoining the Ruffians, made, which lookedlikeavery tyrannical government ; that, he faid, was not fo ftrong an inftance, as it might leem; for he beheved, they did not fo much fly from oppreffion or want at home, as to temptation abroad; for the Ruffians had emidaries conftantly among them, promifing mountains of rewards to all thole, that would fettle in Ruffia : and as they fully performed everv thing to many of the firft emigrants, it induced numbers to follow their example; and I muft allow, that the encouragement c;iven by the Ruffians was i'o much greater, tiian it was poffible, they fhould well receive in their own country, without having every thing in it reverled; that they were really bribed away, in hopes, that the fame of their treatment would occafion a continual increafe in tiieir numbers, w^hich has certainly taken place; though the emigrants, I am informed, do not receive the fame encouragement, as for- merly. Therefore, in this inilance, the de- population of our provinces is not to be attri- buted to any aclive evil at home, but to the artful fuggeiVions of a very cunning neigh- bour. 1 replied, that it was very bad politics in the- government to allow of luch emigra- tions ;that they fliould have flopped them by force, if a fimplc h\v would not have had the S W E D E N. -67 the effedt. He agreed in this, but (aid, that if the emigrating peafants lived not upon the eftates of the nobiHty, they cared very little about their flaying in Sweden, or going to Ruffia: the worthy clergyman further ob- ferved, that there was not, in thefe frontier provinces, one paftor to ten flocks; fo that the people had never an opportunity of being in- formed j in any refpedt, of what they owed to their native country. My friend the Captain, who had made the entertainment, obferved, that all this was very true; but that the origin of their evils was fufFering the Mufcovites to conquer the pro- vinces around the gulf of Finland; for that brought them a neighbour, that could not but prove deftru6tive in every relpedt. When that nation was fhut out from the Baltic, Sweden poflefled mofl of the export trade, which (he now enjoys on that fea ; and he juftly obferved, that this was owing altogether to the mif- chiefs brought on his country, by that madman Charles XII. This was a propofition, that nobody could contradict ; for the truth of it was evident: but I remarked, that Sweden had enough left to carry her to a much higher pitch of wealth and profperity , than flie at pre- fent enjoyed; her bufinefs therefore was not to. regret, what could not be recalled, but to do^ F 2 what- '6B TRAVELS THROUGH whatever her preient fituation demanded, to make amends for paft failures. They all feem- ed, much more ta wifh, than to expe6l this. The next morning, I fet out for Mr. Hir- zeFs territory, having infifted upon providing baggage, horfes, and the neceffary provi- fions for the whole journey, which, I thought, was the leaft I eould do, in return for their civility. Both Mr. Hirzel and Mr. Schorn- brun were mounted on little horfes like mine, which they here call North-country horfes. For a few miles fram Waflay, the country is partly cultivated; that is, you here and there fee a village, with fome cultivated lands about it; but they are thinly fcattered: and we pre- fently got into the wilds, wherein is no appear- ance of any inhabitants; and this continued through the wholeday's journey of forty miles, till we came to a miferable cottage, which is a ki nd of ftragler from a neighbouring-village, which is half depopulated. The country is chiefly compofed of one continued foreft, the trees of which are of a very fine and beauti- ful growth. I was curious to take notice of the appearance, which the land carries in the tracks, where it is clear of timber, and found, that it is, in 2:eneral, covered with a toler- able grafs; and the foil is a good rich colour- ed loam, tending to a clay; but, in fome parts. Honey ; evidently much fuperior to that of many SWEDEN. 69 many places in Sweden, which are mofl profit- ably cultivated. It was therefore extremely plain, that it was not a fault in the country, which has been the occafion of its defolate ftate. The few inclofures around the cottage, were a proof alfo of this ; for although the peafant did not feem to be one of the moil: induf- trious ; yet he had very good crops of barley and oats, and alfo of turneps, and he had a herd of cows, which fed upon the wafie, with a parcel ofyoung cattle, none of which feemed 111 their looks, to complain of their pailure. I fet my bed up in the fame room, in which my fellow-travellers made theirs, of clean ftraw, -upon which they feemed to repofc as well, as on any down ; which was not the worfe for an hearty fupper, we had made on iifli and ham ; and they paid their refpedls pretty moderately to the brandy and the wine, I had brought, which, with a continual fmoak- ing, feemed to pafs away the evening much to their fatisfadlion. The next morning, we continued our journey, through a wild coun- try, which I fhould apprehend, muft have been once tolerably inhabited; for we had a great road all the way, though overgrown with grafs and weeds, but faw not the leaft appear- ance of any habitation. The timber, in this F 3 region 70 TRAVELS THROUGH region is very fine, and in vaft quantities, and the foil in moft places, rich and deep : it is impoffible. but a good governnnent acllvely exerted, might people fuch tracks of country, fo very defirable, compared with many others, well flocked with inhabitants. We rode about thirty miles; and then, alighting, turn- ed our horfes to graze; and, fpreading our cloth and provifions on a dry green bank, well flickered with wood, by the fide of a ftream, we made an hearty meal, and refted ourfelves about four hours, all of us getting a nap for refrefhment : we then fet forwards at an eafypace; and, travelling through the twilight, we reached the banks of the great lake, on which my friend's plantation is, about two o'clock at noon ot the nth. The country here is very fine. The lake is a noble one, of a varying breadth, from three to more than twenty miles over ; and the length is above an hundred ; there are numerous iflands in it, fome of them two or three miles broad, and many others lefs. At the narthern point of it, is one of thele iflands, about two miles from the main land, which is a part of Mr. Hir^el's pofTefTion. We came down to a few cottages on the fhore, which he has built, and where a floop lies, always in jcadincfa to carry him over; into this we got, leaving SWEDEN. 71 ieaving our horfes in a barn by the cottage, and taking all our baggage with us in the vef- fel. In croffing the water, I was much de- iighted with the views; the hills, in Ibme places, riie very boldly from the lake, which has a beautiful effed, as the whole country is covered with thick woods. The ifland is four miles long, and three broad , confifting of Various land, but in general high and dry, and moft of it a wood: Mr. Hirzel built a fmail houfe here, of four "rooms on a floor, having two tolerable parlours, and the wdiole neatly 'furnifhedt in it we found a fervant and his family, who has the management of a fmall farm : near it are barns, ftables, and other offices; and four cottages, which he alfo built, and are inhabited by peafants ; to each of whom he affigned a fmall farm, which he obliges them to cultivate very neatly.. It is highly necflary, that, they fhould be good far- mers; for the fubfiflence of themleves and cattle much depends on it, being at fuch a diftance from any other habitation., .Mr. Hir- zel diredls his own manager fo, as, to obUge him always to have-good ftore of all produds before hand.' He has- a cellar well filled, plenty of fifh and game at command ; and his farm yields him all common proviiions, with gQod fowls: lb that he is always fure of find- F 4 ing 72 TRAVELS THROUGH ing good eating and drinking: he has a large boat-houfe, under which his fioop can run ; and feveral open boats. After dinner, we took a walk about his farm, which feemed to be very well managed, and the crops good ; at ; which I do not wonder ; for the foil of the 'Sfland is a fine black, dry, deep mold, peculiar^ ly adapted, I fhould fuppofe, for all hufban- dry applications. As I had exprefled a defire of failing a little on the lake, for the pleafure of viewing the woods, Mr. Hirzel manned the floop, in the morning of the 12th; and hav- ing laid in a flock of proviiions and my bed, faid, he would make a three days voyage for my entertainment; he fteered fouth by the eaft fliore, and returned by the weft : we made many leagues, having a favourable wind, gain- ing very near the fouth end of the lake : no- thing could be more agreeable ; the water beautiful, and the furrounding country ex- tremely various. We lived well; for his nets and hooks were excellently managed, and fupplied lis with many forts of fine fifti in great perfection, which we drefled and eat with an admirable ftomach. We caught one Carp, that weighed fixteen pounds, and Mr. Hirzel told me, that he has taken them of a larger fize; but they are not fo well tnfted, as thole of about iix or fcycn pounds. Here arc alfo SWEDEN. 73 aifo pike, and tench, but not equal to what I have eat elfewhere ; eels exceeding good ; and a fifli about the fize of a trout, and of the fame (hape, but much fuperior flavour, which they call ?ifnout. I muft confefs, that this was one of the moil agreeable voyages I had ever made. We had about half a day, in which the wind being brifk, the waves ran pretty high, and gave us the exercife of beating over them. The 15th, Mr. Hirzel dedicated to {hoot- ing, for which fport we did not go off the iflands; he had a leaih of fpaniels there, that found us plenty of game ; thefe were pheafants .^nd hares, with a few partridges ; but none of them equal in tafle to the fame forts in England; we had a very good day's work to range about only a part of the ifland ; and ha- ving killed game enough for our ufe and amufement, returned home. Mr. Hirzel informed me, that he had this ifland, which contains about eight thoufand a- cres of land, and a track contiguous to the cot- tages, where wefirft took water, of more than four thoufand more, by being the principal creditor of a man at Abo, who failed ; they were valued at the price of the country, and rated to him for fomething more, than three thoufand pounds; but he had them under five and twenty hundred, which is not four of our Shillings 74 TRAVELS THROUGH fhilllngs an acre for the feefimple, including all the fine woods on them. I exprefled my a- ftonifhment at this ; but he replied, that he had loft confiderably by the purchafe; having bought it for a country-feat forpleafure, that when he purchafed it, it did not yield a lingle {hilling; and that the fjms, w^hichhe had hi- therto laid out, did not much more, than pay the interefl: of them. I anfwered,that flill I fhould conceive, the purchafe might be made to anfwer extremely well, by improving the lands and converting them into farms: He faid, no; he was very fearful, that no money would arife, if it was all improved; for markets were at luch an immenle diftancc, that they could pay in nothing but produdls. But faid he, I have hopes of making it anfwer another way. From the very fouthermoil: point of the lake, there is a coniiderable river, which falls into the gulf of Finland, at the mouth of it, there is a fmall trading town, which increafes in fhip- ping and commerce every day; upon that ri- ver there is a great foreft, which belongs to a nobleman ; and the merchants are employed at prefent in negotiating with him for liberty to cut what timber they pleafe on his eflate; if they fuccced, they defign to be at the ex- pence of cutting a fhort canal to efcape a tall, jn order to carry down the timber to their /hipping; SWEDEN. 75 flipping ; if that is efFe6led, there will be a navigation opened from this ifland into the gulf of Finland ; and I (hall poflefs a market at once for my timber, which will turn to greater account, than any thing elfc that could be done; and after the timber is cleared, I can then apply it to huibandry-purpofes, as the fame market will take off my rents, received in kind of tenants, or raifed by myfelf, as well as my timber. So that the moment the merchants fucceed, my plan is to go and fettle at Pitees, (the name of the town) that I may be on the ipot, and I fhall there, from fuperior advantages, be able to carry on a " greater trade, than at Waflay ; befides the ad- vantage of exporting the products of this e? ftate. If I fhould ever be able to execute thefe plans, my purchafe here will turn out the luckieft event of my life ; and might foon enable me to buy larger tracks of land upon the lake ; for mofl: of the landlords live at Stockholm, and would know nothing of fuch a navigation being executed, any more than of one in Iceland : for thefe tracks are all fo de- fait, that very few of them yield any thing to their owners. But by my transferring rny bulinefs to Pitees, I fhould be on the fpot to |3iake advantage of every event, as it happened; and 76 TRAVELS THROUGH and it would be doubly advantageous to me, as I ihould be the exporter of my own products. I afked him, if he did not apprehend, the merchants would oppofe any navigation but their own, as his timber would be brought to rival theirs? He replied, they could not; for the river is the boundary of the Ruffian and Swedifhdominions,andis free by treaty; there- fore the moft, that could be done, would be the eftablifhment of a fmall toll. ThatPitees was part Swedifh and part Ruffian, one part of the town being in Caulia, and the other in Nyland; which was found, in many circum- ftances of trade, to be a prodigious advantage, and was one reafon of the town flourifhing. I could not comprehend clearly, how he made this out, for he did not explain himfelf. But it appeared evidently to me, that he has a very fair chance of his purchafe proving a fortune to him; and the plan he has laid for making the beft of it, feems to be perfedly well confidered. It is aftonifhing to reflet on the vaft impor- tance of manufadlures and commerce on the value of land: here are twelve thoufand acres, moft of them covered thickly witJi the finefl timber, bought for four ihillings an acre the ieefimple; the foil rich and fertile; materials for building of courfe, from the plen- ty of wood in the greatefl profufion ; a fine lake SWEDE N, 77 lake, well ftored with quantities of fifh, and the woods full of game : In a word, every ar- ticle of provilions to be procured in the great- eft plenty. But for want of manufactures and trade, the value is nothing. What would not fuch a track fell for in a well-peopled and in- duftrious country ; in England, Holland, or France ? This fufficiently (hews the great con- fequence of population . I have heard it aiked in England, when the decreafe of our numbers has been the topic of difcourfe, of what confequence is the matter of population ? It is plain, we have men enough for our armies and our navies; and our lands are cultivated ; I have a thoufand pounds a year, which does not fall to nine hundred, although our popu- lation, it is faid, has fufFered. And I muft con- fefs, that when I have heard fuch difcourles, although T, by no means, approved their prin- ciple, yet did I not clearly (ee the confequen- ces. This country fupplies one with aa an- fwer at once. The rental of a private gen- tleman's eftate depends on the fum total of the nations's population. If there are fcarcely any inhabitants as in thefe provinces of Sweden, the eftate will fell for four ihillings an acre, timber andall; butif the country is full of inhabitants, iikeEngland,itwillfellfor twenty pounds, and the timber, perhaps, for two hundred more. Betvveeii 7S TRAVELS THROUGH Between fucli diftant extremes there will cer- tainly be many degrees, and lome of them fb near to each other, that it will be difficult to lee their diftlndlions ; but fuch are evidently in being, and muft ever be found in propor- tion to the number of the people; if agriculture could alone find mouths enough to eat up and confume all the products, fhe raifes, then ma- nufactures and commerce would not, in this light, be necelTary ; but it is every where known, that a territory compleatly cultivated, will provide food, &c. for a greater number of people, than are employed in the cultiva- tion: hence arifes the dedudion, that manu- factures and commerce are but other names for full population, which can only be gained by their means. From this ifland of my friend Mr. Hirzel, I was determined, what route I fliould take to Peterfburgh: upon confideration, and after making many enquiries, I refolved to go through the province of Savolax to the capital of it, the only town of any note in it, which is Nyllot; and thence to Wyburg, in w.y way to the Ruffian capital. The 17th, in the morning, I took my leave of Mr. Hirzel and his friend, and fet oll'for Pexama, a little town at the diftance of feventy miles; which is all through the forcd: it took mc two days; but I met SWEDEN. 79 I met with no houfes ; therefore all my refrefh- meiit and reft was a meal taken on the grafs, and a nap upon th^ fame pillow. I have feen a Swedifh map, which places feven vil- lages in this road; but I had now fufficient rea- fon to pronounce it erroneous : the country is all a rich foil, and covered, in moft places, very thickly with fine timber : A country, which would feed numerous inhabitants ; and is all admirably watered; for I was more than once, in fight of great lakes; but it is in the moft deiblate condition, and yields not any advantage to its pofleflbrs. From Pexama to Nyflot is between fifty and fixty miles; all the way on the banks of a very noble lake, which, from its narrownefs and winding courle, has exactly the appearance of a great river. The country is all foreft ; but I faw two or three villages; at one of wdiich I took up my lodging : there were Ibme fmall farms, which appeared to be tolerably cultivated; and I found, that this lake, along which I had pafTed, was navigable quite to the gulph of Finland; and that the villages, I faw, were owing to this circumftance; for the timber of the fo- reft was conveyed thither to advantage; and thecuttingandpreparingitfoundemployment for the people. Nyflot Sd TRAVELS THROUGH Nyflot is a little neat town , beautifully fitua- ted in a nook of land, that runs into the lake, with which it is chiefly furrounded. The church is a new building and handfome; the flreets are fome of them well paved and to- lerably built; and there was an appearance of wealth among the inhabitants, all of which, I found, was owing to the timber trade : for two or three miles round the town the country is well cultivated, and fhews plainly, what the reft of it is capable of, did it poflefs the fame advantage of a market. The 2 ift in the morning, I left Nyflot, and took the road to Wyburg, which is at the dif- tance of 60 miles: the lirft day carried me into Caulia in the Ruflian territories, where I was forced to hire a frefh fervant to ferve me as an interpreter; but unfortunately, I could only get a Ruflian, that underftood Swedifli, which language I began to fpeak a little: fo I hired him for the prefent ufe, till I got to Peterf- burgh. Upon entering the Ruflian territories, I was convinced, that the intelligence, I had receiv- ed at Waflfay, was true; that the Ruffians tempted the Swedes to fettle in their provinr ces, and at the fame time took all means of increafmg the population of their dominions; for 1 not only liuv and converfed with many Swedes, SWEDEN. Sj Swedes, but the country was, upon the whole, well peopled with Ruffians, far fuperior to the Swedifh provinces in their befl diftrids, that I have been in. All of it was cultivated, tho* not highly, and every thing carried the appearance of a thriving country, that had nothing to complain of. I arrived at Wyburg the 22d : it is a place of confiderable trade, which has increafed greatly of late years, by the encouragements, it has received from the Ruffians. Vafl quantities of timber are ex- ported from hence ; fo that the harbour, which is a very good one, is feldom, while the fea is open, without many fhips in it. The provinces of Caulia and Kexholm fur- nifh this timber, and great quantities come from Savolax, through a part of Sweden; this timber trade has increafed prodigioufly, fmce the Ruffians cut a fine canal to open a com- munication with the northern lakes, by which means, trees are brought from the dif- ilance of four hundred miles in rafts, and for & great part of the way, five men are fufficient to bring down ten thoufand rafts. The 23d, Ifet out for Peterfburgh, which is two days journey, the diflance about fixty miles. The country, though fo near the ca- pital of the Ruffian empire, is not all culti- vated, which furprized me much; a great Vol. Ill, G part ^2 TRAVELS THROUGH part of it confifts of forefts, and there are many marfhes -, but Hill it is much fuperior to the Finland provinces of Sweden, better inhabited and better cultivated. But here it i: time to take my leave of Sweden ; hoW" tver, I fhalladd fome general obfervations,! made on the people of that kingdom. CHAPTER III. General Reflediiojis on the State of Sweden-^ Religion — Learning — The fine Arts — Man- ner of Life — Government'-r^ Agriculture-^ Manufactures — Commerce — Wealth — Popu- \fltion — Travelling. TH E common idea of the Swedes, which I have gathered from converfa-* tion and reading, has been that of their be* ing good foldiers, a6tive, brave, and hardy ; but that few of them are ingenious, or have abilities to make a figure in other arts orwalks in life. This has been owing to the a6lions, that were performed by Charles XII. which were fuch proofs of their courage, that the reft of Europe too foon believed, they were capable of being famous in war alone. I profefs myfelf clearly againft this idea, which I arn confident, is ;^ very falfe one j they make (rood SWEDEN. ^3 good ioldlers, it is true, but they are capable of making any thing elfe. I have attended with as much affiduity, as I was able, and up- on all the opportunities that I have had in my power, which have been many, I think, they feem to have as good parts, as any other nation in Europe, and much fuperior to fome. They are, by no means, dull of apprehenllon ; are ready in their anfwers upon any fubje^l, with which they are acquainted; have no- thing of phlegm in their chara6ler : they nre in general as chearful a nation, as I know, not a noify buftling people, that are one moment in grief, and the next laughing : they have "not {o much vivacity as the French, but I think, they have, upon the whole, as much as the Englifh. They are, in general, a very patient and an induftrious people, and capa- ble, with proper encouragement from the go- vernment, of making a great progrefs in the arts and fciences, and in manufactures and commerce; all which are very valuable qua- lities, when they meet in a nation of fuch acknowledged bravery. RefpeCling religion, they are guided in a great meafure by plain good fenfe ; though a free country, they are not peftered with noiiy fe6ts; neither are they at all violent in the condud of the eflablifhed faith ; and, altho' G 2. a ereat 84 TRAVELS THROUGH a great part of the kingdom is very ignorant, yet I faw fewer ligns of fuperftition, than in any country I have been in, Holland and England alone excepted. Among the better fort of people, and the higher ranks, there is a great deal of learning: a good education in Sweden fits a man to fhine in any country in Europe : in their fchools, they learn Greek, Latin, French, Englifh, and German; fo that there are very few inftance of a young man's underftanding the dead languages, and not at the fame time being mafter of two or three very ufeful living ones, which is much more, than can be faid of our youth in England. They have feveral univerfities, which are provided with very able profeffors ; in thefe feminaries, the favourite knowledge is natural hiil'ory and the mathematicks ; and herein they fhew their good fenfe as much, as any nation in Europe ; for there are no other parts of knowledge, that deferve fo much at- tention, the reft being for ornament alone ; but thefe are ufeful in every branch of life. Many of their mathematicians are in general efteem, as they are very rarely without feve- ral, whofe works are known to all Europe. In natural hiftory, they are unrivalled; but they do not owe their fame in this branch merely SWEDEN. $s merely to LInnseus, for before he was born 3 this ftudj was the favourite one in their uni- verfities, and they have produced many men, that gained them great reputation for their works, but they have fince been eclipfed by Linnaeus, and his numerous difciples. I have been in many mixed companies in Sweden, and I do not remember converling with any gentleman, that had not a conlider- able fliare of knowledge, and plainly fhewed on moft topics, that he had had the advan- tage of an excellent education. They are mofi: deficient in the polite arts; you look in vain for a painter, a poet, a ftatu- -ary, or a mufician. If the Abbe du Bos's fyftem is a juft one, this is the fault alone of their climate ; but without attributing it to phyfical caufes, we may find a reafon in the moral ones. The fine arts never make a great progrefs in any country, till it becomes im- menfely rich, and very luxurious : the arts are the children of luxury; without a great flow of expence, running through every clals of the people, we may pronounce, that a na- tion is not rich enough for the fine arts to fettle among them : the artifts, that excel, mull: always be fare of fomething more, than a competency, they mufl have affluence ; they are generally men of warm imaginations, and G 3 lovejs S6 TRAVELS THROUGH lovers of pleafurc. They muil: indulge their inclinations, and not be crampt in poverty, while they are attempting to produce works, that fliall be tlie admiration of llicceeding ages. Hence, all the famous ages, in which the arts have arifen to a great degree of emi- nence, from many v^ery famous men being cotemporaries,, have univerfally been the richeft and mofl luxurious ages in the world: not that wealth alone is lufficient without luxury. The Dutch are very wealthy, but they are not a luxurious nation ; artifls would flarve there in the midft of riches. Both luxury and wealth abound in the kingdoms of Afia, but then a defpotifm, exceflively fevere, deftroys every nobler effort of the mind. The Swedes have no poets : fome attempt that fort of compolition, but it is always in La- tin, and confequently of no merit : their painters never rife higher, than very bad por- trait ones : the fame fiifliion obtaining in Swe- den as in England, where, till very lately, we had nothing but portrait painters, becaufe no others met with any encouragement. You hear very good mufic at Stockholm, but it is all by German muficians. This is not therefore a kingdom, to which any perfon would rcfgrt to be entertained by the fine arts. They SWEDEN. 87 They have a theatre at Stockholm, oa which, duringapartof the year, French come- dies are reprefented, fometimes concerts, and oratorios, but the times of a6ling are very ir- regular, not meeting always with encourage- ment enough to keep it open, even in the vi^in- ter ; fo that it has been known to be fliut up for two years together. Another thing, which takes much from the gaiety of this capital, is, the court not being at all brilliant; which is owing, in Ibme meafure,to the fmall- nefs of the royal revenue, and to the prefent flate of parties, which occalions many of the principal nobility to abfent themfelves. The manners of all ranks of people in Sweden are very agreeable ; the fuperior claffes have an eafy natural politenefs, which prejudices you in their favour at firft acquain- tance. They have not a fwift, or formal, nor pert or foppifh, but a plain eafy carriage and manner, which is the refult of good fenfe and humanity. Their converfation is agreeable; and they pay great attention of foreigners, without troubling them with national cufloms and ceremonies. Duels are not common at Stockholm; yet the men have very jufl ideas of their honour, and as unwilling to put up with affronts, as more tenacious and auarrel- &me nations. C 4 The 88 TRAVELS THROUGH The principal expences, into which they run, are thofe of the tahle, drefs, and equi- page. People of large fortune keep prodi- gious tables, which are ferved with all the magificence, that is found in France and England, and the variety of their wines have no end. In drefs, alfo, they appear prodigal; •and their equipages, from their number, are expenlive, but not executed in the fhewy taite of Paris. Plowever, thefe articles of luxury, in their greateft degree, are confined ro a few families, whofe wealth is very con- liderable; for, in general, the nobility are not rich : there are many private eflates in Ger- manv, that much exceed any in Sweden. The way of dividing the refidence of win- ter and fummer, as pra6lifed in England, takes place here, only in part; many of the nobili- ty and richeft of the gentry, live entirely at Stockholm, icarcely ever feeing their eftates; others live entirely in the country, never fee- ing the capital, at leafl, but very feldom : fome, however, have houles at Stockholm for the v/inter feafon, but live in fummer on their eftates, having very good lioufes, which they ornament with gardens and plantations. As to the prefent flate of the government of Sweden, I could enter in a pretty long detail of fome chanp;es and other circumfl:an- ces. S W EDEN. S9 Ces, that have attended it lately, but as great fart of my information is drawn from people^ that are deeply concerned, I do not chule to fay much upon the fubje£t. But I fhall ob- ferve, that the government is a plain repub- lick, the king, being no more than the firfl magiflrate, with very little power, not fo muck as a {lad th older of Holland in feveral elTential articles. There are convuliions in the admi- niftration of affairs, v*^hich threaten a total change; for here is an apparent contradi<3:ion, which is, a king and the people on one iide, and the nobility on the other; moft of the im- portant authority is in. the hands of the latter, who are in fa6l the legiflature of the kingdom; but difputes, parties and diflentions are growTi to an amazing height, and bid fair for com- ing to open arms; at all events, {bme great re- volution may be looked for ; and the event may eafily be conjedured, while the people, united under a leader of the firft rank in the kingdom w4th ibme prerogative, are on one hand, and the nobility on the other; a difpute, in fuch a fituation, cannot fail of be*- ing fatal to the latter. Indeed, I never knew affairs in any country in a fituation, that pro- mifed fo fairly, for bringing in an abiblute fway, in the fame manner, as it was introduced in Denmark; many moderate men in Sweden lament 90 TRAVELS THROUGH lament the diffentions, which do fo much mifl chief to the kingdom, and affert, that if they had a defigning prince on the throne, it would be very eafy for him to feize as great a power, as ever Charles XII. enjoyed. At the fame time, that they are of this opi- nion, they make no fcruple to declare, the change would be for the advantage of the kingdom, and that no government, regular in Its operations, can be fo bad, as the prefent ir- regular fcene of anarchy and fadlion. But herein, they certainly carry their ideas to a ve- ry dangerous length, notwithftanding many and great errors of government, and fome op- preffions among the peafants ; yet I am clear, that the countrymen, throughout the king- dom, enjoy a great degree of liberty, and are left in quiet pofleffion of their property ; their taxes are, in fome inflances, very unequal; they are kept at much dlftance by the nobility, and have none of that licentioufnefs allowed them, which is fuch a dilgrace to England : But, notwithftanding all thefe circumll:ances,Iwill venture to pronounce them, beyond all com- parifon, a happier people in every refpc6t, than they would be, were their government abfokitc. Let thofe, who have travelled tlirough France and Sweden, form an idea of the ftate of the peafants in both, and they will not SWEDEN. 91 not for a moment hefitate at agreeing to this truth. By lodging with the peafants in fb manj journeys, through the remote provinces of the kingdom, I had the opportunity of examining very minutely into their condition, and I re- marked them, in general, to be a very con- tented happy people ; there are few cottages m Sweden, that have not lands annexed to them, by which means they raife many produ^ls, which are of infinite ufe to them in keeping themfelves and families. England, it will certainly be allowed, is as free a country, as any man can wilh ; and yet our labourers have very feldom more, than a fmall fpot for a gar- den, which is too inconflderable to be of much fervice to them ; nor are the Englifh iiearfo well fatisiied with their lot, as the Swe- dilh peafants ; they are not fo tightly drefled, their cottages are not near fo good, and their poverty in general, is much more apparent; all which I attribute to the circumflance of the Swedes, having thofe fmall farms with herds of cattle on the wafle, which are of in- finitely more value to them, than all the a- mount of thofe taxes, which they pay, and from which their brethren in England are not only exempted, but have alfo the advan- tage of rates, publicly raifed for their affifl- ance ; ^« TRAVELS THkOtJGH ance ; of which there is nothing of the kind in Sweden : I know not three peafants in that kingdom, that have not a farm of twenty or thirty acres of land at leaft, and feveral herd of cattle. Here indeed, I fhould give an explanation, for if this was the cafe in Eng- land, we (hould have no fuch thing as a la- bourer to be hired ; all would attend merely to their lands; but in Sweden there is no in- convenience in this, for the peafants, who work regularly in the woods for hire, have the fame; but their wives and daughters manage their farms, fo that the men are not taken from theirufual labour, three days out of forty. This is a mofl: admirable cuftom for them- felves, as well as the kingdom, and makes the population of a kingdom, wherever it is pra£lifed, of far more account, than at firft it appears. It would be in vain to attempt in- troducing this cuftom into England, for the great degree of idlenefs, in which the cottage- woman live with us, would be an unfurmount- able obftacle. NotwithflandingI have, in different parts of my journal, minuted the remarks, I made on the prefent ftate of agriculture in the provin- ces, I pafled through ; I mufl: here repeat, that the Swedes are univerfally good hufband- men ; 1 faw no lands, laid out and cultivated, in SWEDEN. 93 in fuch good order, in any part of Germany, ^ud the Danes are alfo far behind them ; the pea-fants and farmers in Sweden, who cultivate enly for a fubfiftance, keep their lands in good order, and raife fuch crops, that their ^elds would be no difgrace to a middling cuL tivated part of England ; while their farmers ^s have good markets in view, would figure in the finefl counties of this kingdom. Their crQp§ of corn I obferved, were in general good and clean, that they keep large ftocks of cat- tle, and provide plenty of food for them to fubfift on in winter. If it is confidered, what a vaft quantity of wafte land is found through- out the kingdom, moft of which, almoft any body, that will, may take under the payment of a very trifling rent ; this good hufbandry will appear the more extraordinary, as thejf having fo much land in their power, 1% might be expelled, would make them {lo-* yens, yet the contrary is the cafe, for they take no more, than they can manage well, and by that means, I apprehend, find their hufbandry more profitable, than it would otherv/ife be. The reader rnay have remaked, that I have almoft every where mentioned, wheat being cultivated by them; this, I think, is a very^ ^xtraprdinary iiiftance pf docility and good fenfe ; 94 TRAVELS THROUGH {tnfa ; a few years ago, that grain was culti- vated only in a few of the fouthern provinces, and on foils, picked up with much care for it; but when the prohibition on the exportation irom Englifh put the Swedifh government ftrongly on promoting the culture at home, the farmers, throughout the kingdom, readily came into the plan, and fowed fo much, every year, increafing the quantity regularly, from that time to this, that, at prefent, it is ipread all over the kingdom ; fuch an inftance, I dare to fay, is not, in any article of culture, to be met with in England ; and from this in- ftance, it is very evident, that the common ideas of difficulties, in the introduction of no- velties, are many of them very falfe ; for if any perfon had ventured to propofe the cul- ture of wheat in Sweden, fifty years ago, at leafl, in many of the provinces, where we now find it, he would have been thought mad ; but none of thefe things can be well known, till a full and fufficient trial is made of them. The Swedes are now fo well in- formed, by experience, in the culture of wheat, that fome judicious and fpirltcd laws would, I doubt not, enable them to raife quantities enough, for a confiderable exportation, fo as to enable them to come in with the Poles for a (hare of a fupply for the Dutch, and the more SWEDEN. ^5 more fouthern nations of Europe: fome boun- ties, properly applied, would efFe£l this : not bounties, as in England, on the exportation, but to all thofe farmers, who cultivated, given quantities of wheat, in a fecond round of years, on lands, taken from the wafte; for the great obje£l is, the encreafing the quantity of cul- tivated land, by improving the wild tracks, and, at the fame time, applying them to raif- ing a valuable fort of corn, that is fure to pay well for exportation. B3^ making the grand objed, the railing the corn, inftead of the exportation of it, the home confump- tion would always have the refufal at the market, which is not always the cafe in Eng- land. Laws Ihould likewife be made to en- able any peafant, farmer, or other, to take in as much of the wafte, which joins his farm, as he pleafes, without paying any rent for twenty years, and afterwards, only a moderate one for the life of the improver : this would be a wonderful encouragement to all the inha- bitants of the country, and would certainly, in a few years, bring great quantities of wheat to market, till the home confumption not taking the whole, a regular and profitable ex- portation, would, of courfe, be eftablifhed. For bringing about fuch great works as thefe, nothing is wanted, but to bring affairs into fuch ^6 TRAVELS THROUGH fuch a train, that private people, hy pufliing their own interefls, mufl, at the fame time, advance thofe of their country; for if ever there is a diflindtion made, nothing can arife from it, but evil upon evil. Encouragement fliould alfo be given to the draining bogs and Hiarihes, which in Sweden, are univerfally the richefl tracks to be met with, but this is a work beyond the power of mofl cultivators, without the affiftance of the government; nothing would efFe£t it, but a premium of lb much per acre, large enough to go far to- wards the whole expence ; and if fuch pre- miums of whatever kind, amounted to a con- iiderabie expence, it fliould be raifcd by frefh taxes, or an increafe of the old ones, over the whole kingdom ; for the benefit, purchafed, would be of importance to the whole, and therefore the whole ought to contribute. Nothing wants a wife regulation more, than the woods in this kingdom ; for the wafte, that is made in cutting them, both of timber ;ind land,- is extravagantly great. The atten- tion, which M. de Verfpot has given to this article, fhews what fhou Id be done, and the manner alfo, in which the undertaking fhould be profecuted. No profitable woods ougbt to be deftroyed, unlefs the land is converted immediately to hufbandry ulcs. That noble- man's SWEDEN. 97 Sn'^n's excellent method of thinning his woods is certainly the rational conduct, and ©ught to be inforced over the whole king- dom. There is no couritrj, in which inland ha- vigations would be attended with better con- fequences ; for all their produfts are very bulky, and mufl: have water-carriage, or they cannot be got to market. Many of the rivers, of Sweden are navigable; but there are many tracks, covered with the fineft woods, which yield fcarcely any produdl, for want of water-carriage, at the fame time, that confiderable rivers run through them, which might, at a very fmall expence, be made na- vigable, only by removing local obftructions, and not by a general deepening or widening. Few countries are better fupplied with harbours, many of which are extremely Ipa- cious and fafe ; and the number is fo confi- derable, that their trade will never ftand flili for want of them, in any part of the king- dom. Relative to the Swedifli manufactures, I ihall, in general, remark, that from what I viewed mylelf, and had intelligence of from others, they are not confiderable. Some of the nobility fay, that they have carried their point, in making the Swedes cioath them- VoL. III. H lelves 58 TRAVELS THROUGH Selves- with cloth and linen of their own fa-* iarick ; but this is a very great exaggeration. The peafants are univerfaiJy cloathed with a eoarfe woollen cloth, that is made at home^ and fome other of the lower ranks of th& people. There are alfo fome gentlemen and nobles, who, thro* patriotifm, wear Swedifh cloth, that is pretty fine, but that is, by no means^ general, and the cloth is much dearer, than much finer Ibrts from England and France. Thefe manufa6tories, which they have been able to ere(^, are not fo conlider- able, as this account may feem at firft to in- dicate; for it fhould be remembered, that the peafants were always, nine parts in ten, cloathed in the fame array as now, which is not with. manufactory cloth, but with that, which is fpun, and wove in their own houfes by their women ; fo that the new eftablifh- ments are not very con fide rable ; it is true, they increafe, and, if good attention is given to encourage and protecfl them, they will, in ibme years, grow to be of very great cbnle- quence to- Sweden, and not only entirely fupply their own eonfumption with all, ex- cept the fine French cloths, but alio furnifh coarfe ones enough for exportation, in ex- rliange for the liner Ibrts ; and this will be pulhing the advantage, as far as ever they can look SWEDEN. ^9 look for; but in the prefent ftate of things, they are far diftant from this point, and, un* lefs the animolities, which dlflracl the go^ vernment, are fo entirely laid a{ide,as to make all parties join in one work, and attend to that alone, viz. the good of the kingdom ^ there is no hope of their attaining to that defirable flate. They have fome linen fabricks, in which ate wrought very good forts, both of hemp ^nd flax ; but they are not near confiderable enough to fupply their home confumption* Of glafs and paper they import very little* Hardware is a confiderable article among them, not in the ftile of our Birmingham manufactures, but principally in the founder^ way : they caft great numbers of cannon, which they export to all Europe ; alfo bells in great number, and many other articles. Indeed, they are unrivalled in their iron and copper mines, v/hich are far more confider- able, than thofe of any other country in Eu- tope ; fb that they apply copper to mofl of the purpofes, that we do lead in England, fuch as coverings to their churches, public buildings, and great private edifices, &c. Commerce flourlflies more in Sweden, thau it did fome years ago: to what this is owing, I could not difcover ; for their products are tiot greater, in proportion, to the iiicreafe of H 2, their ic5b T R A Y E L S THROUGH their {hipping; and though feveral very ju- dicious laws have been made for its encou- ragement, yet I fhould not have luppofed, the efFedt would have been anlwerable, to what appears, unlefs other reafbns had confpired at the fame tinie. However, the fa6l is, that iheir fhipping is much increafed, their ihips they build of a greater buithen, and they engage in more trading voyages, than for- merly. This is a point of very great impor- tance ; for, if they are able to export the principal part of their iron, timber, pitch, tar, hemp, and copper,in their own bottoms, it will add more, than any thing elie, to the wealth of the kingdom; at the fame time, that their naval force will beincreafed greatly, which is the beft and moft ufeful force, they can clierifh. Increaiing their {hipping is im- proving and accelerating the markets for all their products, and cannot but increafe them in a very high degree. The building and fitting out the {hips is the moll advantageous manufacture in the kingdom, and that, v.hich more than any other, brings wealth into the country. The branches of commerce, which they have more particularly increafed of late years, are the Eafl-India trade, the trade to Portugal, Spain, and the Mediterranean ; that of England, Holland, and France, is not improved. Some perfons are in doubt about the SWEDEN, i(%i the German branch of their commerce, but, I believe, that is rather greater, than it was. The general efFeds, which flow from aii improving agriculture and increafmg manu- fa(9:ures and commerce, are a greater degree of national wealth, more of the precious metals, and an increafing population. From the beft intelligence I could get, the kingr, ■dom, I believe, is more wealthy, than it was twenty years ago. It contains more money, and is upon the increase in that article ; but as to population, it has made no progrefs, and many perfons affirm, that there is a decline in it. How far this is conliftent with the irrb- :provement in the other particulars, I fhall not "determine; but I may remark, that in general thofe circumftances are attended by an in- cCreaJing people. What caufes fhould have wrought contrary effedls in Sweden, I am not -able to afcertain ; but, as the people are often numbered, (though not accurately, rior all the clafles) the fadl is pFetty- well Con- *^firmed. It lliould make one doubt the ex- tent of thofe improvements; for I muft own, "I have little idea of agriculture, manufac- tures, and commci-ce improving, without population, increaiiug exactly in the fame pro- portion ; for an increafing people can only be owing to the inhabitants, finding an eafeijli maintaining themfelves, and their famiHes tu> H 3 burthen, 162 TRAVELS THROUGH, &c. burthen, which is effecled by a great plenty of employment; and improving agriculture, manufactures, and commerce, is increafing ■employment, and conlequently the people. " Travelling in Sweden, unlefs upon the fyf- tem, which I followed, is a very uneafy affair; in the moment, you get out of the few great roads there are, which do not lead through a fifth of the kingdom, you will meet with dif- ficulties; but in the great roads, if you have your own carriage, the poll-horfes, boys, and accommodations, have nothing objedlible in them, and you are fure of meeting with great civility in all the inns, and from every perlon, -with whom you have the leafl connexion on the rqad. But, when you leave thefe great roads, then the flage, in diftance from inn to inn, is very great, and the accommodation, though with much civility, very indifferent. If your bed is carried with you, and you cau vide the whole journey, every peafant's houfe is open to you with the utmoft hofpltality ; and they will, for very trifling rewards, do whatever is in their power to ferve you. Without precautions, the diet will be very indifferent; but they will get you fifli, wild .fowl, and venifqn, excellent of the kind, with which you may load a horfe from place to place, while it keeps. And this will remedy every in convenience. Wine is eafily carried. Trave h Travels through Ruffia. n [ 105 3 CHAP. IV. Defer iption of Peterfburg — General Accounts of the Empire of Rufjia — The Emprefs — - Government — Manuf azures — Trade — Army ^^Navy — Prefent State. I Arrived at Peterlburgh, the evening of the 24th, and, as T defigned making fome flay in the city, determined to hire private lodg- ings; for I had been informed, that the public inns were not only very extravagant, but alfo very bad, which, indeed, is the cafe in all ca- pitals, for, where the people of quality do not go, (having houfes of their own) one is always fure of meeting with very indif- ferent treatment. I hired a firft floor, confifl- ing, after the Ruflian faflilon, of two dining- rooms, a drawing-room, dreffing-room, and bed-chamber, befides fervants' apartments^ for three guineas a week ; fuch a fuit of rooms at London, it would be very difficult to have at twelve. Peteriburg is built on feveral iflands, which were once nothing more, than marfliy fpots of mud, over- run with reeds : but the immortal Peter, whofe undertakings, in every thing, carried a magnificence of idea in them, that can never be fufficiently admired, converted a miferabk bog into a fine city. And io6 TRAVELS THROUGH And here, I cannot avoid anfwering the re- flections of feveral writers againfl that immor- tal monarch, for facrificing more than half a million of men in founding this city. The Czar's object wasto become anEuropean power, which, without a port on the Baltic, he could not, but he might as well have pretended to be an Americanone. His vafi dominions, though 4:ontiguous to Poland, and themfelves a part of Europe, were, at fuch a diftance from the European theatre, and in fo barbarous a ftate, that nothing, but opening himfelf a way to the Baltic, could poffibly bring his grand plan to bear. By founding this city, and making it the capital of his empire, and a iea-port, fit to receive the naval force, he declined to a£t on that fea, he anfwered all his purpofes at one flroke; and, confequently, could fcarcely pay too dearly for the propofed advantage. As to the lofsoffuch numbers of lives, the fault .certainly was not fo much owing to the fteadinefs of the Czar's adhering to his plan, as not taking proper care of the men, while thev were at the work; fmce every one mull be very fenfiblc, that works, to the full as great, as any he executed, could now be per- formed in England, under fimiiar circum- fiances, comparatively fpcaking, without the lofs of a n^an;. But the conlcqucnccs, which , wc It u s s I a; 107 ^e all know, have flowed from the founding this city, have been of fuch infinite impor- tance to the Ruffian empire, that no expenee, that could ever have been incurred, would have been too great for gaining fuch fignal be? nefits. Peterlburg is the foul of commerce in all thefe Northern parts ; it is the founda- tion, on which all the Ruffian naval force has been ere£led; and the port, on which their iiurfery of failors moft depends. At the fame tirne, that thefe capital circumftances attend it, muil: be acknowledged, that it is very de- ficient, as a receptacle of the men of war of a great empire ; for the depth of water, the frefh- -nefs of it, the docks, yards, every thing at Pe- terfburg, are againft the ule of it for that pur- pofe. The yards are at Peterlburg, but the depth of water is fo inconfiderable, that no- thing can be put aboard the firft-rate men of war, before they are conveyed to Cronflot, which is not eafily done neither. Once, this work was effe£led by means of mojft expen* five machines, but now, they come v^^ithout that difficulty, by means of the new canal, which is not however fo complete, but that infinite attention is neceflarj for conducting them. It i§ not only men of war, however, that are bujlt in thefe yards : galleys * are much f Count AI garo^^I J- mention W the naval power of the RuiHans, 10? TRAVELS THROUGH ^luch in ufe for the Baltick; but, as this em- pire has experienced of late great changes, in the Ruffians, obferves, " Galleys are here the proper things. Be there never fo littje water, there is always enough for them. They glide between the little iflands and the rocks ; they can land any where. The Czar was fsn- fible of it at laft, and fent for galley-builders from Ve- nice. I met with one of them greatly advanced in years, and was not a little furprifed to hear terminations in ao in fixty degrees of latitude! The galleys, that one fees here, are of different fizes ; there are fmall ones, which carry 2bo\^t one hundred and thirty men, and others much larger. They are all armed with two pieces of cannon en the prow, and furnifhed with chace-guns and fwivels en the fides. The Czar gave to each of them the name of a Ruflian fifh. Now they are numbered, as the legions were; there are upwards of one hundred and thirty of them, and they are to be much more numerous. By this means, an army of thirty thoufand men Is tranfported with great eafe. Rowing is to the Ruffian foldiers, what the exercife of fwimming was to the Romans. Every foot- fol- dler learns to handle the oar 4t the fame time as the mullcct, by which means, without maritime commerce, and with- out embargoes, the Ruffians have always crews ready for their galleys. They caft anchor every night, and land, whei'e it is leaft cxpcxEled. Wh«n difembarkcd, they draw them up upon the land, range them in a circle, with their prows and artillery pointed oufward, and thus they have in a trice a fortified camp. They leave five or fix battallions to guard it, and with the reft of their troops over-run the country, and lay it under contribution. The expedition ended, they re-embark, and begin agaip in another quarter. Sometimes they tranfport their vcilcls from one water to another over a flip of land, as was praitifed by the antients^ on fcveral pcafions, and p.lrti- culurly RUSSIA; 109 the fjftem of- politics, the ufe of galleys varj. .In a war, on the coafl of the Baltic, they are increafed in number; but, when a peace Gomes, they are negleded, and not kept up, in the manner they ought to be. During the late war, they might have annoyed the Pruffian dominions, infinitely more than they did ; but the great army was the only thing- attended to. Peterfburg is amazingly increafed in fize within thefe forty years: At the death of Peter the Great, it did not contain eighty thouland cularly after the example of Mahomet II. at the feige of Conftantinople. . *'.The Swedes can teftify, whether thefe Ruffian galleys are formidable. They have feen them ravage their rich mines of Norkopping, the whole coafts of Gothland and Sudermania, and fhew themfelves, even before Stock- holm/' He alfo adds another circumftance, which is worthy of note, concerning the timber ufed for fhip- building here. " Of what wood do you think the fhips are built at Peterfburg? It is a fpecies of oak, which is at leaft two fummers upon the road, before it arrives. It comes ready cut by the carpenter from the kingdom of Cafan. It goes a little way up the Wolga, then the Tuertza, , paffes through a canal into the fea, from thence into the Mefta, and, by means of the Volcova, falls into a canal, which conveys it into the lake Ladoga, from thence it defcends at laft by the Neva to Peterfburg. I faw in this port a floop, built at Cafan, from whence it came by the rivers, I have juft mentioned, which join the Cafpian fea to the Baltiek, and are a quite different thing from the famous canal of Languedoc," rid TRAVELS THROUGH thoufand inhabitants, and now the Ruffian S aflert, that there are five hundred thoufand ; but this is an exaggeration. It covers a very great extent of land and water ; the ftreets are fome of them very broad, long, and with canals in the middle of them ; and others are planted in the Dutch fafliion; which, I before obferved, is a wretched plan ; the houfes are immenfely large: the palaces of the nobility, I think, exceed in fize thofe of any city, I have feen ; and that of the Emprefs is an amazing flrudlure : but let me remark, that they are rather great, than beautiful : the fize is all, that ftrikes you : and thefe prodigious piles are ftuck. fo thick wnth ornaments, that there is hardly any fuch thing, as judging of their proportions: the Italian architedlure is mixed with the Dutch, and the whole forms very inelegant buildings, in which true tafte is to- tally facrlficed to a profufion of ornament. But if the eye does not fcrutinize into the fe- parate parts of the buildings, but takes only the ftreets at large, the city may be fairly pronounced a very fine one. The Czar himfelf fparcd no pains in ren- dering it as ftrong as pofllble ; for being at the very extremity of his dominions, clofe to his enemies the Swedes, and open to the attacks, which were poiHble taarife from his European connc6lions, R U S S I A; tii conne6b'ions, he made a point of having it impregnable ; but herein he certainly failed. There are many forts, and whole (hores con- verted into platforms, and lined from end to end with great guns. Thefe works begin at Cronflot, which is made very flrong, and they laft to the city. There is a citadel, regu- larly built, and capable, not only of prote£ling the city on one lide, but alfo of itfelf landing a fiege. Yet there are many feamen, who af- fert, that a fleet of fhips well manned and con- ducted, and provided with a proper number of firefhips, and bomb-ketches, would, with- out any great difficulty, lay all Peterfburg in aflies. I muft own myfelf of a very different opinion, for here is always a very confiderable fleet of men of war, from 60 to 100 guns, with numerous failors, that could man them on a very (hort notice; thefe (hips, properly difpofed by way of batteries, would render fuch an attempt impracticable, even if the fortifications are granted to be deficient, which is more, than will be allowed by many officers, well Ikilled in this part of their art. Among the public buildings, there are many, extremely worthy the attention of a tra- veller, particularly the dock yards and naval magazuies, the arfenal^ foundery, admiralty, &;c. without infifling on the imperial palace, the 112 TRAVELS TH^ROtTGH the cathedral, or many churches. In the docks, they have a great number of carpenters continually at work, among whom are many EngHfh, difchargcd by the government, on the conclufion of the peace in 176:?, they meet with great encouragement here, and are much better employed, than if in the fervice of France or Spain. They build here all forts of veffels, from fhips of one hundred and twenty guns, (and fome, much larger have been known) down to boats, and the number, always on the ftocks at a time, is conliderable. After the death of Peter the Great, the marine was negleded, infomuch, that the Emprefs's naval ftrength was not computed to be a fifth part of what, that great monarch pofrefl'ed,and this was owing to a want of trade, which can alone make feamen; unlefs, when in the hands of fuch a man as Peter, who created every thing: But the prefent Emprefs, who has thrown the fpirit of that great monarch into all the departments of the ftate, has re- vived it wonderfully, fo that at prefent the Ruffians have a formidable navy, and, in a few years, will have a yet more conliderabla one. : There is fcarcely any thing at Peterfburg* more del'erving notice, than the foundery i The iron is brought from Kexholm by water, and R U S S 'I K $i| and the number of cannon and mortars, that are call here, is very great j alfo cannon balls^ fhells,and ail forts of mfiitary implements, in which iron is ufed; which are made here at as fmall an expence, as in Sweden, or any other part of the world. The arfenal is always well ftored with them j and there are vaft quantities, made on a private account for exportation, forming a very confiderable branch of com- merce* The trade of Peterjfburgis much more con- fiderable, than that of any other town in the Ruffian empire 5 and would figure, on compa- rifon, with many very great marts in other parts of Europe; bat unfortunately, that vaft commerce is, nine-tenths of it, carried on in foreign bottoms. The Dutch alone load an- nually here with timber, iron, and all forts of naval ftores, a great many fliips, and the Englhli many more. The commodities, thefe nations carry from Peterfburg, are tar, bees wax, pitch, hemp, flax, leather, fkins, furs, pot-aflies, timber, plank, iron, yarn, linen, lintfeed, &c. and thefe in fuch quantities, that the very balance of trade, between Great-Britain and Ruffia, has been reckoned at four hundred thoufand pounds a year, againfl the former , the a- mount of the total commerce may theref:)re be eafily conceived. The royal navy of Eng- VoL. III. I ' laud ti4 TRAVELS THROUGH land is almofl: totally fupplied with hemp from Peterfl^urg, alfo with great quantities of iron, and other naval (lores, and all the fnipping in England Jikewife; and this importation has increafed very much, fmce the Swedes laid a prohibition on our manufadures, fo that the importation, from that country, was reduced to the few articles, which neceffity obliged us to have from thence ; and all the reft very politically tranferred to Ruffia. The great amount of the commerce, be- tween us and this empire, has been the occa- fion of very many political differtations and treatifes, proving the neceffity of encouraging theprodudion of all the commodities, we im- port from Ruffia, in our colonies ; and I think, our politicians have not, in any inftance, had better grounds for their opinions, or fup- ported their proportions with more unanfwer- able arguments. A trading nation fhould ne- ver regret parting with its money, when {he thereby adds to her induftry j but, in this cafe, we pay three or four hundred thoufand pounds a year to Ruffia for thofe commodi- ties, which our own colonies would produce; and the difference is, that now we pay in cafli, but to our colonies, we fhould pay in manufadlures : confequently, for want of this meafure, being effected, we lofe the em- ployment RUSSIA. 115 ployment of fo many of our poor, as could earn the whole amount of that fum -, and wealfo lofc the general profit, refulting to the nation at large, by their earning fach a fum of money'; for any increafe of our national income, f aifed by an increafe of induftry, is beneficial to us, in a much greaterdegree, than the mere amount of it* To illuftrate this, let us confider the advantage to Ruffia,of pur pay- ing her a balance of three or four hundred thoufand pounds. That balance is paid to a certain number of merchants and dealers at Peteifburg and other ports -, they pay it to a fet of landlords, miners, hufbandmen, and manufacturers. Thefe again pay it to all the manufa6lurers, tradefmen, &cc. with whom they deal ;- and thefe to a frefh fet. Now every art, trade, bufinefs, and profef- fion, in the whole empire, come in for an ad- ditional incomf*, from this fum^ circulating through the mafs of induftry; and every one of them are elTentially the richer. If this circulation could be traced, it would probably be found, that three hundred thoufand pounds a year, gained in the precious metal, were equal, in general by improvement, to the va- lue of nine or twelve hundred thoufand pounds a year. Becaufe, no one canbefappo- fed to have an increafe of income in Ruffia, I 2 any n6 TRAVELS THROUGH any more than any where elfe, without in- creafing his expences proportionably ^ that is, he buys more food, more cloth, more flioes, employs more builders, and, in a word, more artifls of all forts. None of :which can increafe, without reciprocal benefits, flowing back again ; and the government, from the whole circulation in every flep it takes, feizes a part, by means of taxes. This is but a flight fketch of the effects of an increafing wealthy to explain it fully, would take a much greater compafs. The greatefl trade at Peterfburg is carried on by the Englifh ; next in rank, come the Dutch ^ as to the French, they deal here, as little as pofTible^^ for the two crowns are very far from being on a good footings the French and the Swedes being in clofe alliance, they therefore trade to Sweden for all thofe com- modities, which England gets from Ruffia, fome few excepted, which are not to be had at' that market. Notwithftanding this, they confume large quantities of French commo- dities in Ruffia, but thefe come to them, principally through the hands of the Dutch. The building this capital has had a very great effect in improving large tracks of land in the furrounding provinces : The corn and other provifions, which are brought hi- ther. RUSSIA. yij ther, and the variety of merchandize, that is exported from hence, employ fome of the moft confiderabie inland navigations in the world. The Neva, the great lakes of Lagoda and Onega j the Tuerka, the Mefla, the Vol- cova, and the Wolga, all thefe rivers, with many others, tho' fome of them are at a great diftance, keep open a communication between Peter/burg and thofe noble tracks of country upon the Cafpian and Euxine feas : but it may be fuppofed, that the greateft advantages are made by the people, who have not fuch a diftance to go j fo that the produ6ls of all the neighbouring provinces are infinitely grea- ter, than thofe of others more diftant. I have heard, fome Ruffians affirm, that all this feeming increafe of culture, of manu- fa6lures, and of commerce, is imaginary; that it is all owing to the fovereign's fixing the feat of government here, vv^hich has not raifed a new population, but drawn an old one from other provinces. Molcow was once the me- tropolis, and the feat of government, &c. and Novogorod, the great ftaple of trade ; but Peterfburg now is both ; and has half depo- pulated thofe cities, as well as Archangel, which was once a place of very great trade. In anfwer to this, I allow, that part of the af- fertion is true ; that much of the population I 3 of n8 TRAVELS THROUGH of this city, and its neighbourhood, is owing to a defertion of other places ; but, at the fame time, I muftinfift,that a new population mufl have been created by means of this city, be- caufe a new induftry has fprang up, new trades opened, new manufa6lures eftabliihed, and innumerable artifls employed, which were not in being before; and many of which could not have been in being, had not this city been founded. There is no doubt, but the Ruffian commodities found, in fmall quanti- ties, their way into Europe, before Peter the Great's time 3 but every one muft be fenfible of the comparative fmallnefs of the quantity, when they had not an European port, and when all their produ6ls,in order to get to the Baltick, were forced to fubmit to a long land carriage through an enemy's country, and fubjecl to whatever duties, that enemy chofe to lay on them. Theprefent method of carry- ing on their trade, manufactures andprodu6ls has, I think, every advantage over the former; and if this is allowed, it follows of courfe, that population is proportionably increafed, and wealth moft certainly; both which have a direct effect in raifing the value of land, for a great dift-^-nce around the capital. But the building of the city was a work of the Great Peter's, which is giving it all the illuftratioUj^ RUSSIA. "9 illuflration, that is necefTary ; for if ever mortal was endowed with the true art of governing, with that kind of univerfal ge- nius, equally great in pradtice and fpecula- tion, it was him. All his ideas, all his plans, had fomething fo great and comprehenfive in them ; fuch a power of forefeeing future events, and fuch abilities, in providing for them, that he never once failed in theory, tho* in pradice, obftacles fometimes arofe which were beyond his power to countera6l. The founding of Peterfburgis one capital inftance; for ever fince he made it the feat of his ma- rine, and the principal trading town of his do- minions, it has been of more real fervice to the empire, than any other mcafure,he could poffibly have adopted. What an extent of political imagination is difplayed in his inland navigations ! They have a greatnefs, unrival- led in any other part of the world. But the moft Capital projed of the Czar's was that, wherein he planned a navigation to the Medi- terranean. Next to Peterfburg,the favourite of his empire, was Azoph,the reafon of which was his defign of eftablifhing a trade from thence, thro' theThracianBofphorus to the Archipe- lago. This would not only have given him greater mercantile advantagesthanPeterfburg, I 4 but 120 TRAVELS THROUGH but would have endangered the very being of the Turkifh empire ; by letting a naval power of the Ruffians into the very heart of Conflantinople -, and that Peter defigned fome- thing more, than commerce, we may eafily gather from his forming docks, yards, and naval magazines, atAzoph; and actually had fbips of feventy guns upon the flocks, which futhciently fhewed, that he intended a naval war upon the Euxine fea againft the Turks. The Ruffian empire, though of fuch an amazing extent, is very well knov/n to be badly peopled. The beft writers inform us, that it contains feventeen millions of inhabi- tants, and one million in the conquered pro- vinces ^ but from thebeft accounts I could get at Peterfburg, I believe the number at prefent to be more confiderable. Aim oil from the moment, that the prefent emprefs began to reign, fhe has increafed the number of her fubjeds by many ways, principally by a gene- ral and very adive encouragement of all arts, of agriculture, raining, manufa6lures and commerce, and this with fuch efFed, that all of them are more flouriihing at this time by many degrces,thanthey were twenty years ago. And another means, which fhe takes to increafe her people, has been inviting foreigners^ this RUSSIA. 121 this file has done, in a ftill greater degree, thai) any of her predecefTors ; almoft from her ac- ceffion to the empire, fhe has brought conti- nual bodies of Germans, Poles, and Greeks from Turkey, to fettle in her dominions, and thefe not few in numbers ; from the coafts of Germany, fhip loads, but from Poland and Turkey,wholetowns,villages anddiflrids hav^ left their habitations and fettled in Ruffia; nor has it been only at certain times, but re- gular emigration, in confequence of her conti^ nued encouragement. This encouragement, which the Emprefs has conftantly granted, confifts in feveral very important articles. AH the expences of the journey, or voyage from their native country, are borne by her; fhe feeds and fupports them by the way. Upon their arrival, at the terri- tory, appointed them to cultivate, (which has always been part of the crown lands) every family has a cottage erected at her expence, to which they contribute labour ; ,they then are furnifhedwith implements, necefTary for cul- tivation,and one year's provifions for thewhole family. A further advantage is an exemption from all taxes, during live years. All which is a fyfhem of fuch admirable policy, and car- ried into execution with fuch unufual fpirit, even while the finances of the eii^pire have been 12* TRAVELS THROUGH been much diftrefTed by expenfive wars, that I know not an inftance in hiftory, fuperior to it. There can be no doubt, but the advan- tages muftbeimmenfe, not only inpopulation, but alfo revenue i for thefe fettlers, though they have an afTignment of lands for ever, yet it is, after a certain number of years, under payment of an annual quit-rent, fufficient to produce a confideiable revenue. The continu- ed diforders in Poland, and the oppreffions in Turkey, have caufed many thoufands of fa- milies, annually to leave their country, and make ufe of this bounty of the emprefs. By this time, the inci'eafe of people muft be very greatj fome perfons, whofe information I be- lieve is very good, afTured me, that the num- ber of fouls, thus gained, fince the acceffion of the prefent Czarina, is not lefs than fix hun- dred thoufandi I muft own, the number appears almoft incredible. We may, with- out fuppofing the total, fo very great, eafily fee from hence, that (he muft have raifed the revenue of the crown lands very much, and put them in a way of being yet more im- proved; for certainly, peopling them was the firft rational flep, that could be taken , and one which never could deceive her. I made en- quiries concerning the fituatlon of the emi- grants, and whether all the promifcs, that had RUSSIA. 123 had been made to them, had been executed; and I was affured, that they were moft punc- tually ; but that, in very many cafes, much morewas done for them, than promifed, and every effort taken, to make them perfectly fa- tisfied with their choice j a proof of which is the increafed numbers, that have been coming from thebeginning: the accounts fent back by the firft fettlers, being fuch, as induced others to take the fame meafures, and this effect has been regular ever fmce; fo that the number of new comers is at prefent greater than ever, and promifes to be fo confiderable, that in a few years, if the troubles in Poland continue, the increafe of people here will be immenfe, and with them, certainly, that of the power, and wealth of the empire. Nor has any event of her reign difcovered a greater underll:anding, than this regular favour fhewn to population. The revenues of the Ruffian empire are very great, confidering the value of money /'which in thefc fort of difquifitions, ought ever to be confidered, though it rarely is fo. The Emprefs is, in many articles, the fole mer- chant in her dominions. The whole trade, by land to China, is on her account : this is not indeed confiderable, for a caravan rarely goes now. Rhubarb, pot-afhes, and fpices,are branches, in which fhe, and nobody elfe, trades. fin. TRAVELS THROUGH trades. Silt is an article, that brings her in an immenfe revenue. Very large quantities of thebefl hemp of theUkrain are bought and fold on her account ; much iron, the fame ; and even beer and brandy are her's. Befides thefe articles, fhe has cuftoms, tolls, and a poll-tax of three (hillings and fix-pence a head. The erown-lands, which are prodi- gioufly extenfive, bring in a confiderable revenue. The following general account was fhcwn me at Peteriburg of the Emprefs's revenue, jeckoned in Englifli money. It is handed about there, and thought to be not very far from the truth in any article. Poll-tax ■ ■ 1,750,000 Crown-lands ■ ■ 672,000 Salt ' ■ ■ 542,000 Hemp and iron ■ 370,000 China trade. Rhubarb, and Spices 48,000 Pot-afhes 60,000 Cuflans • 179,000 Baths and licenfed houfes 68,000 Other duties 5cc, comprehendinp: 7 ,11 f 400,000 all other taxes 3 ^ Total '■ " £ 3,689,000 But the value of fuch a revenue will not uppcar H ,U S S I A. 125 appear clearly to any reader, that does not confider the great difference of the value of money in this country, and others, that are full of commerce and vv^ealth j upon tlie near- eft computation I can make, thefe four mii^ lions are about as good, as ten in England. "And if we fuppofe them ten, we fliall then fee the great importance of liberty, trade and manufaftures, in railing a pubUck revenue ; for eighteeil or nineteen millions of. people in Ruflia, yield no greater revenue, than a third of that number, yield in England. Wealth, therefore, depends no further on po- pulation, than the induftry of that population extends. It is a flourilliing agricuhure, im- proving manufactures, and an extenfive com- merce, which yield a great publick revenue. Introducing induftry among all claffes of people, that vv^ere not induftrious before, is therefore as elTential an increafe of inhabitants, as bringing in foreign emigrants : both theie means have been employed by the prefent fo- vereign of Ruffia, for the aggregate of the in- duftry of this empire is vailly more con- ljde];abie, than when (he came to the throne. She has iflued out feveral edicts for the en- couragement of agriculture ; and herein (he has proceeded with her ufuaipoliticksi for £he rightly confidered, that the way to make this ' moft: 126 TRAVELS THROUGH moft ufeful of all the arts, to flouiifh, is to (et itsprofefTors at eafe; (he has accordingly given a much greater degree of liberty to the pea- fants, than ever they enjoyed before; for they were greater flaves, than even in Poland; but now, every nobleman (called yet Boyards in Ruffia) whofe eftate confifts of a given num- ber of families, is obliged to enfranchife one family every year, and they are direfted by theEmprefs tofelect for thispurpofe the mofl induftrious family they have : the peafant has a farm affigned him, and theEmprefs makes him aprefent of fome implement of the great- eft ufe ; but he is, by the fame edid, to pay after three years a rent to the nobleman, that is very confiderable; the defign of which is to convince the nobility of the advantage of let- ting their eftates to the peafants, for a rent in money: and I was informed, that many of them had made a great progrefs in it, partly from convi6lion of its expediency, and partly from paying their court to the fovereign. Befides this meafure, there are great en- couragements given both in freedom, and in exemption from taxes and fervices, to all thofe, who improve waftc lands, by bringing them into culture. Such a fyftem is highly ne- cefTary in an empire, that contains more land than Europe, but not more inhabitants, than Germany; RUSSIA. 127 Germany^ and where, immenfe tracks of as fine foil, as any in the world, are utterly wade. If the life of the prefent Emprefs is a long one, great things will be done in this walk of improvement, and many very exteniive terri- tories cultivated, which have hitherto laid wafte. The foreigners, which fhe has fettled, andcontinues to fettle, and the encouragement which huibandry meets with, will have a great effed:, in giving a new countenance to the agriculture of many provinces. I made enquiries concerning the prefent ftate of Ruffian manufactures, and was in- formed, that they have never been able to make them, any thing conliderable : They have at Peterfburg fome very large founderies, where all forts of ammunition and military ftores are made ; and they make fome very good cloth of hemp, but the quantity of this laft is not confiderable. There are many other fabricks, but notofconfequence, nor any ways proportioned to the number of the people. They have many woollen manufactories; bac they do not cloath even their own armv. England has the greateft fliare in the com- merce of fupplying them; the import, at Pe- terfburg of coarfe and fine woollen cloths, is very confiderable : v/hat we do not fend them, they have from the Dutch -, but the French fend I2S TRAVELS THROUGH fend none. Nor is there hardly a manufac- tory in England, that does not fend great quantities of its fabricks hither ; and, not- withftandjng, fo great an exportation, yet the importation of hemp, iron. Sec. is fo great, that a large balance is paid (as I before men- tioned) to Ruffia. There are feveral inftances of much encouragement being given to the national manufadures, but the effe6l has not been great, and I muft own myfelf of opinion, that it never will be great -, for the Ruflians do not feem to take to any fort, but thofe, in which they are from their infancy converfant. They make excellent carpenters, (hip-build- ers, fmiths, and founders, but they will ne- ver make a figure, as weavers. It alfo deferves enquiry, whether it would be highly political, to make any great efforts in complicated manufactures, which require very many hands, while there is fo immenfe a territory to cultivate, and not of barren mountains,likeSweden, but of great extended plains of as rich land, as the beft parts of England, orevenHolland : confequently,with fuch materials to work upon, it is much to be queflioned, if a given number cf hands would not in raifmg hemp and flax, or making pot- afhes, bring in a greater fum of money to the country, than if they were employed in ma- nufactures. RUSSIA. 129 nufa^ures. It appears to me very clearly, that they would. From the defcriptlons, which I have had of feveral immenle provinces of this empire, I have no doubt, but a thoufand pounds and ten people would, employed ifi. at- tending cattle, yield a greater return in hides and tallow alone, than from any manufac- tures they could be employed in ; for there are meadows (not bogs or marfbes) covered with fine grafs of an hundred fquare miles in a place, with no other inhabitants, than what are wild, and very few of them. In a coun- try, where there is fuch plenty of excellent land, and through which, run fo many navi- gable rivers, that would conveyall its products to a "ready market; and notwithftanding thefe advantages, there are large wafles, ftill on the very banks of thofe rivers ; under fuch cir- cumflances, I apprehend, that no attention to manufactures can yield a profit, equal to a froper cultivation : the wealth arifing from it, would be far greater, the public revenue would be much more improved, and popula- tion increafed in a much greater proportion. If I was fufhciently verfed in the theory of flocking ground with inftruments of tillage, arid with cattle, &c. I fhould be able to make this appear by minute calculations; but I do Vol. III. K not J30 TRAVELS THROUGH not apprehend, that there is any reafon, m general, to doubt it. While this is the cafe, whoever fills the throne of Ruffia, will moft advance the inter- eils of that empire, by promoting, by every pof- fible means, the cultivation of fo immenfe a territory ; if there happens a fucceflion for a long period of time, of fuch fovereigns, as at prelent fill that throne, this vafl: empire will be raifed by thefe means to a pitch of grandeur, much exceeding, what it at prefent pollefles: and from the condu6t, which has been hitherto purfued by the prefent Emprefs, there is great reafon to think, that fhe is feniible of the im? portance of directing her views principally to this end; they have hitherto been at- tended with fuch fuccefs, as to be a very ftrong proof, that the plan, upon which file has pro- ceeded, is a juft one; a different one might have been followed more in favour of manu- factures, by planting the foreign emigrants thickly in the near neighbourhood of thofe places only, which have fabrics in them, with a view to the employment of many of them in thefe manufactures. Relative to the commerce of Rufiia, it iliould be remembered, previoufly to any en- quiry into its prefent ftate, that this immenle empire is by no means fituated advantageoufly for RUSSIA. 131 for trade. The onlj ports that it pofTefles, from which any trade of confequence can be carried on, are in the Baltick, a fea, that is frozen almoft half the year; and, at the fame time^ it is at the extremity of the empire ; fo that the commodities, which are exported through this fea, are obliged to be brought fome .thoufand of miles, before they are put on board the fhips. This is fuch a difads^antage^ that it much affe<9:s the commerce of the em- pire, and is of a nature, that will not admit of any remedy. This circumflance coniidered^ the commerce of Ruflia is very confiderable, as to the export of its produdts and commo- dities, but the fhipping of the empire is very trifling, compared with thatto which Ihe gives employment. All the trade, which the Eng- lilh carry on with Ruffia, is in their own bot- toms; it is the fame with the Dutch, and al- moft all other European nations; fo that the Ruffian flag is Icarcely known in the world ^ although Ruffian commodities are met with in fo many places. To remedy this evil by a general extenfioa of commerce, and by procuring a navigation on a more favourable fea, the Czar, Peter the Great, formed the noble plan of railing a naval pov^er on the Black fea, and eftabliffiing at coronierce on it, with a communication thro' K z the 132 TRAVELS THROUGH the fea of Conftantinople with the Mediterra- nean ; one of the greateft defigns, which could have entered the head of any fovereign of Ruffia, and which would give a very confi- derable {hare of the commerce of the world to . that empire. It fhould be remembered, that the richeft produ6ls, which Ruffia exports, are thofe of the mod fouthernly provinces, parti- cularly the Ukraine; which is univerfally al- lowed to be one of the fineft countries in the world; the rivers, which flow thro' this ter- ritory, all take their courfe to the Black fea; fo that it is only by an artificial navigation, and a long land carriage, that they are brought to Peterfburg. It is well known, that they could be delivered at Conftantinople for a much lefs price than at Peterfburg ; which , with the increafe of trade, refulting from a na- vigation open all the year, and immediately into the center of Europe, would give the ernpire at one ftroke, ten times the commerce, it can ever pofl'efs otherwife ; and would, at the fame time, give the Czarina fuch an advan- tage over the Turks, as to endanger the very exiftence of Conftantinople, and with it, that of their empire. And if the plan, upon which that great monarch condu6ted his wars againft the Turks, be confidered, it will appear, that he never lolt fight of this great object. Azoph was RUSSIA. I.3J was the town, which he acquired at a very great expence of men and money : he fortified ,it at a yet greater expence, and built a fleet of ftout fhips for that navigation, with docks, yards, and magazines of all forts ; but the unfortunate campaign of the Pruth put an end to his hopes, and gave back that conquefl: to^^the Turks. Had he been fuccefsfu], he defigned the conquefl of the Crimea, which would at once have given him pofleffion of a noble province, and the command of the Euxine. The fame idea was fteadily purfued in the war of 1735, which ended with the ceflion of Azoph to the Ruffians, a fortrefs, of all others, the moft important for the pro- fecution of this defign. A very little reflection will give us an idea of fome of the confequences, which would, in all probability, attend the execution of this plan. Without fuppoiing an entire conquefl of Moldavia, Bulgaria, and Walachia, with the Tartar diflrids to the North of the fea, as ibme writers have done, let us only ftate the navigation, from the Euxine to the Mediterra- nean, being made free to both nations, and Azoph and the Crimea in the hands of the Ruffians. They would then have a free navi- gatioi:^ from all parts of their empire, by K 3 means^ ^34- TRAVELS T H R O U G f^ means of the Tanais and the Donetz, down to Azoph ; that poi't would then be the grand ma- gazhie of all the commodities of their empire, where their fhips would load for diflrributing them through a-11 the fouthern countries of Europe, and on the coaft of Africa, at the fame time, that Peterfhurg fent them to all the Northern ones. But this trade would gave them a new export, which would prove, per- haps,;of more confequence, than all the others put together; that of corn: the fineft terri- tories of Europe for huihandry are faid to be the tracks on the North of the Black fea, in- cludmg the province of the Ukraine; at pre» fent, thefe countries have no vent for fuch a produft^ and therefore raife no more, than for tbelr own eonfumption; but, in cafe of fuch a Ruilian navigation, as I am nowfpeaking of, this territory would lie much better for liip- piying the beft corn markets in Europe, than thofe, which at prefent fupply them. Barbary and Sicily, it Is true, yield an uncertain fupply; but it is well known, that Holland fupplies moft of the demands of Portugal, Spain, and Italy, when embargoes are laid in England ; and the Duth bring the corn, they thus trade in from I>antzick; let the reader therefore compare the navigation from Azoph, to all the coafls of the Mediterranean, with that from RUSSIA. 135 from Dantzick, round three fourths of Eu- rope. It is very evident, that the Ruffians would at once command the entire fupplj ot all thofe countries; not onlj^ with fo impor- tant an article, as that of corn, but would, for the fame reafon, gain the exclufive trade of' naval flores to them likewise; iron, hemp, can- vafs, timber, &c. Relative to ftrength in war, the fuccefs of (lich a plan would only be too great ; for one can hardly fuppofe, the Turks would fubmit to a Ruffian navigation, through the heart of Conftantinople, without they were firfl: reduced to the laft extremity; and in fuch a flate of weaknefs, their fubmitting to it, would, in cafe of a fucceeding war, be but another word for the overthrow of their empire. It would depend on the naval force of the two empires on the Black fea ; for whichever fleet, in cafe of a quarrel, was fuperior, they would nearly command the event of the war; if the Turks had the better, the Ruffians would be cut off from all the advantages propofed ; and if viftory declared for the latter, Couftantinople, and all the provinces of the Ottoman empire, would be expofed to them in the mod dange* rous manner; and if the advantages of the Ruf- fians, in building and equpping fleets, with their territory behin4 them,fo aboundingwith K 4 ail 136 TRAVELS THROUGH all forts of materials, be confidered, it can hardly be doubted, but they would gain the mofi: decilive fuperiority. Nor fhould I omit obferving, that the mere poflfeflion of Azoph might be made a means of putting this plan in execution, and carrying any future war, if well direded, to the gates of Conftanti- nople. Let any one confider the prefent afpe£t of affairs in that quarter, and the motions of the Ruffian troops, and it will be evident, that this idea is now in being; and that, in all pro- bability, before the prefent war fees a period, the Turks will find the arms of Ruflia, infi- nitely heavier, than in the laft, and themfelves attacked with a maritime force on the Black fea, much too great for them to contend with. I have been told, that it is a fixed determina- tion of the Czarina's, not to conclude this war, without gaining a powerful eftabHfhment on the Black fea, fo that Azoph may be but one flep, to conned: with further and equally im- portant acquifitions. If we judge from the prefent flate of the Ruflian army, we may look for great fuccefs; from the firfl foundation of it, the officers did not want experience ; and the men may all be called veterans. It is the fame army, that faw all the campaigns againfl the king of Pruf. RUSSIA. 137 Pruffia, that were beat, Without flying, at Zorndorf, and conquered at Cunnerfdorf; and that have fince been in continual adion in Poland, and always vidlorious. It coniifts of two hundred and fifty thoufand old foldierSj iixty thoufand of which are horfe, better mounted, and finer troops, than any, that were ever in the Ruffian army before; with a train of artillery as fine, as any in the world, and what is yet of more confequence, well fupplied with officers and engineers, from all parts of Europe, attra6led by every muni- ficent encouragement. The Ruffians are very fenfible, that the lofies they fuftained, and their want of fuccefs in general, againft the king of Pruffia, was owing to their ar- tillery, being very badly ferved, and it has given them a great eagernefs to remedy this fatal evil; and, at prefent, I believe, they have done it efFe£lually ; they will not any where be wanting in fuccefs on that account. This empire has not any neighbours, to whom it is not much fuperior in force, and in the confi:itution of its army. Poland is at its mercy, and will continue fo, till (he is reduced to a province, an event, I fhould never be much furprized at. Pruffia is not comparable in power to Ruffia, and could never make the {land againfl her arms again, that we faw in T38 TRAVELS THROUGH in the laft war ; becaufe the Ruffian army is better, more numerous, and with an artillery, that yields to none in Europe ; and, at the fame time, with an advantage fhe never en- joyed before ; Poland behind her, three fourths of it abfolutely in her power, to winter in, inftead of falling back to Ruffia, which was the cafe before. I dwell the more up- on thefe particulars, becaufe it appears very clearly to me, that the next general war will fee thefe two powers again in oppofition, and I conje6lure with very different fuccefs. The prefcnt ftate of the Ruifian navy pro- mifes alfo well to the empire; for it never faw fo many hands, employed in it, fince the > time of Peter the Great to the prefent. New^ fhips are every day launching at Peterlburg, and all the old ones, repairing with great ex- pedition; a flout fquadron is fitting out, of fuch a force, that one would think, the Em- prefs meant to awe the Baltic, while her army is employed againil the Turks. She has many fiiip-carpenters on the Tanais, and will be extremely formidable on the Black fea. So that if ever Ruflia began a war with a good profped of fuccefs, it is this againft the Turks. There are many Englifh at Peterfburg; be- fides feveral gentlemen in the Britifli fadory, with RUSSIA. 139 •with whom I became acquainted, on my firfl comuig hither : there are fo many, that I am convinced, we have more people in the Jluf- lian fervice by fea and land, as well as in many other departments, than is conjectured inEng- land. Th^y certainly meet with good encou- ragement, or they would not be tempted to leave their own country; and very politic it is of the Emprefs, to avail herfelf fo ftrongly of the alliance, fhe has with us; for nothing can be of more importance to her, than getting as . many of our officers by lea and land into her fervice, as poffible ; men, fhe has in abun- dance, and men, that will ftand for ever to be ihot at; but the defarts of Ruffia will not give her experienced officers, tho' her own wars have formed many, under the tuition of fo- reigners. Our engineers are of infinite con- fequence to her; and Ihe has great numbers of fhip- carpenters from Britain, as well as of- ficers and common feamen. There never was a period, more favourable to fuch defigns, than the conclulion of the late war, in which we had employed a greater number of forces, both by land and fea, than we could poffibly keep up in peace ; fo that very many of them might be fuppofed willing enough to enter in- to the fervice of a power, in alliance with us; ail I40 TRAVELS THROUGH an opportunity invaluable to the Emprefsj and of which, I am clear, fhe made good ufe. This caufe, with the conftant trade we car- ry on with Peterfburg, fills that city with Englifh, Sotch, and Irifli ; but they make no great figure; which is very ealily, account- ed for. From what I have feen of the Rul^ fians, the character, I had heard of them, ap- pears very jufl ; they are a flrange people, that carry, in all the lower clafles, the marks of civility, jufl emerging from barbarity. They are obedient, and very patient ; but have a morofenefs, that feems, as if it would never be tamed. The lowefl among them live in con- jftant fe verity, yet that does not feem to bow down their fpirits or activity, as flavery does in all other countries : they make nothing of hardfhips, and will bear in continuance, what would deftroy, in a fhort time, other people of lefs robufl conflitutions. The higher clafTes, however, fhow nothing of this. They appear, in fome meafure, like other people, which is the efFeft of luxury among them, that every where foftens andhumanizesthepeopleamong whom it comes. It may be thought odd by thofe, who have never been in Ruffia, that I Ihould talk of luxury among the Mufcovites; but there is no Court in Europe, in which (the lituation and other circumflanccs of the coun- try R tJ § S I A. 141 try confidered) there is more luxury ; and par^ ticularly, in the article of drefs, equipage, fer- vants, and the table; which is including the mofl devouring branches of it. I have been three times at court, which is, what we com- monly call, very fplendid; the drefles of every body are more expenfive, thanlhave anywhere feen: all in gold and iilver and jewels, but fcarcely any tafte; they have in their drefles but one ambition, which is to be as rich, as poffible, and to have a great change ; but as to having an idea of tafte, and real elegance, even the nobihty feem not to know, what it is. They are ridiculoufly fhewy, the climate confidered, in their coaches and fledges, thinking, in every infl:ance of this fort, that their rank can only be manifefled by an enor- mous expence. In their tables alfo, they are in the fame flile; profufe in every thing: this has a very bad effeO: ; for their revenues, a part of which ought to be expended upon their eftates in improvements, and finding employ- ment for their neighbouring poor, are all :fquandered in the luxury of the capital, giv- ing employment toEngUflimen, Frenchmen, and Dutchmen, inftead of their own country- men. I know not, what motive the govern* ment can have had, for a long while, in en- couraging this profuiion, unlefs it be, ta keep 142 TRAVELS THROUGH keep all the nobles poor, and thereby the more dependent. The government of Ruffia is the mofl ab- folute in Europe ; there is not even the ap- pearance of the leaft barrier, between the will of the fovereign and the people : all ranks are equally (laves to the Emprefs, not fubjeds ; and their punifhments fliew the fpirit of the legiflature ; the greateil nobility are liable to fufFer the knout, that is, to be whipped to death ; and other violent punifhments are ufed, fuch as cutting out tongues, hanging up by the ribs, and many other efforts of barbari- ty, which fhew the cruelty of defpotifm, without having any good effedl. In the fame fpirit alfo, we have feen the revolutions of the government : fcarcely, a fovereign dies a na- tural death, but is cut off; and, by a revolu- tion in the government, a wife, a brother, or a iifter, fixed in the throne ; and all this performed by the regiments of guards, who, in fadt, are pretorian cohorts, giving away the empire at their pleafure. This is ever «i jTiark of a defpotic government, which is al- ways infecure, in proportion to its feverity. It is amazing, that politic princes, who are advanced to a throne by the favour of two /)r three regiments of guards, do not fee in a clearer manner, that the fame power, which frivcj RUSSIA. 14,3 gives, can take away; and, the moment they are firmly fixed in their power, do not extir- pate the corps to whom they owe their ad- vancement. Peter the Great faw the tenden- cy of the Strehtes and difbanded them, inftitu- ting three regiments of guards in their place; but thefe guards, from not being fent to diftant campaigns, and being conftantly around the; perfon of the fovereign, are, in fa6l, the fame in power and opportunity, as the Strelites. la a free government, or even in an abfolute monarch, provided, there is a fliew of fome liberty, fuch, as is in the kingdoms of France, Spain, &c. we do not fee the guards, daring to acl in this manner: but in countries of pure defpotifm, like Rufiia, Turkey, Perfia, &c. a prince, in order to be fafe, fhould have no guards in particular, but all the regiments of bis army, ihould be guards by turns; and when he is aw.i^y from the capital, the garri- fon of every place, he is in, be his guard, for the time he is there. This method, tho* it might not infure them from all the evils, which attend defpotifm, yet it would give them a much greater degree of fecurity, than, they could poffibly be in otherwife; which one would apprehend an objedl of the firfl impor- tance. The Roman hiflory is full of inflances of emperors 144 TRAVELS THROUGH emperors being depofed, and others fet up, by thepretorian cohorts. Many are the Otto- man emperors, who have been flrangled by the Janiffaries ; and the hiftories of other countries, underfimilarcircumftances, abound with the like examples; which (hould make thpfe monarchs, that owe their advancement to a few regiments, fele£ted from the reft of the army, throw all their forces upon the fame footing. Peteriburg is tolerably gay, befides the bril- liancy, it derives from the court. There are a. great many concerts, in which we find nume-. rous performers of great merit, but all Ger- mans; here are plays alfo exhibited, but irre- gularly, and not with agreeable circum- ftances ; an opera was eflablifhed, but it did not lafl long; but by the accounts I have had, the gala time is, when parties can be made on the ice : In winter, all the country is covered with fnow, frozen fo hard, that it is the common feafon for travelling; and then Innu- merable parties are made in fledges, which are drawn on the frozen fnow over lakes, plains, rivers, bogs, &c. and mufl: form a fpedlacle, really aflonifliing to thofe, who never beheld It: I am alio told, that this way of travelling js fovery commodious, expeditious, and agree- able, that a thoufand miles are pafled with much R ij S S i A. i45, tniicii greater cafe, than an hundred at any- other leafon. As I purpofe feeing the fouthern provinces of the empire, I fhaii therefore be gone, before this entertainment is tobe reaped ; but; if I can make it tolerably convenient, will take afnare in it, on my return for Po- land ; tho' I have no great idea of travelling on fnowwith any degree of information, or even much entertainment; for the foil, and the cultivation of it, and the ftate of the pea- fants, which afford me, not only infi:ru6lionj but entertainment,are then rendered invifiblei fo that a journey, full of the greatefl variety, mull have then an entire famenefs. This frozen fnov/ is, however, of prodigious con- fequence to the trade of this country; forcar- riage upon it, is wonderfully cheap, and more expeditious, than can well be conceived, which is a matter of great advantage to a country, that has fuch roads as Ruffia. . The journey, from Peterfburg to Pekin, is the longeftj that is gone by land throughout the world ; it is near a year and half going, and as much returningj but then it is a tra- ding caravan, much encumbered with bao-- gage and merchandize, and in a part of the route wdth water; for all the men and cattle, for many days, are paffing fandyd^farts, which are utterly void of water. Part of this im- VoL, III, L menfc J46 TRAVELS' THROUGH menfe route is performed on the fnowj through a northerly part of Siberia, where there are no roads^ which are pafTable, except on thefnow. Of this vaft journey, Mr. Bell, in his travels, has given a very good account. Ife is much owing to that gentleman, that the world knows any thing of Siberia, which is certainly one of the moft extenfive countries in the world ; and, to the furprize of the weftern part of Europe, confifts of feveral provinces, all of them three or four times as big, as Great Britain, with a moft fertile foil, and a mild climate in the foiithern parts, capable of feeding a moft numerous population; but inftead of being peopled, in any proportion, to its ftze, it is, comparative- ly fpeaking, a mere defart. But I can never be perfuaded, that it is impoflible for a fove- reign of P.uffia, who fets heartily about it with judgment, activity, and penetration, to peo- ple all his dominions ; or, at leaft, to put tliem in a way of doubling their numbers, in as fliort a period, as ever our American co- lonies did; for this great work a time of pro- found peace would be necefTary, and an em- peror, that was of a truly philofophic difpofi- tion. liberty muft be diffufed, all flavery of the lower ranks broken through, and every man allovN'cdto become a farmer, that pleafes.. I pur- k U S S I A. 147 ' I purpofed leaving Peterfburg, the firft week in September, being the furtheft time, I was informed, that I could venture to fet out up- on a long journey, unlefs I llaid till the frofl ^nd fnow were fet in. My defign was to go to Mofcow, and from thence to Kiovia, the capital of the Ukraine, a country, I was de- firous of feeing. Upon making enquiries into the proper preparations for fuch a journey, I found, there were but t woplans ; one, to travel with a carravan to Mofcow, and the other to go only with my own attendants, of which I fhould not have iefs than five, and all well armed : that it would not be advifeable to travel with my own horfes, as I might pro- cure a military order, to be fuppiied by the peafarlts, from poll to pofl, at a fmall price; and, at the fame time, the owner of the horfes would attend, as a guide. In purfuance of this advice, I fold my little Swedifh horfes, though fbmething againil my will, and made up my guard with my own fervant, my Germaa poftillion, and my Swede, who underflood the Ruffian language ; and to thefe I added, by the favour of General Worofoff (to whom I am otherwife much indebted) tv^o foot foi- diers from his own regiment. Thefe five fel- lows were each of them armed with a broad fword, a pair of piilols and a carbine ; and I L 2 crried f48. TRAVEL Sr TEIROUGH carried a pair of piftols and a fhort rifled bar- rel gun, which were my arms from Denmark through all Sweden, though I never had any necelTityof ufmg them. Thus equipped, I was alFured, I might travel in perfe6l fafety through all Ruflia. e H A P, V. 'journey from Peterjhurg to Mofcow — Defcrtp^ . X 4fon of tJje Country — Great Settlement of Poles — Mofcow — fourneyinto The Ukraine — Ac- I :^^ount of that fine Province — Defer iption of the j^gri culture of it — Culture of HefUpyTobacco^ ■ Mc^ LEFT Peterfburg, the 6th of September,, and, with much difficulty, got to Juam- gorod, which is fifty miles, through a country which is alternately a marfli and woods. From . thence to Novogorod took me threq days, being the diftance of one hundred, iijilcs. I laid, both nights, at Ruffian inns. I, travelled in the charader of a general officer \n the King of England's fervice, which was, of noflight ufe ramcj foritis not eafy to con- ceive the refpe6l, which all the lower ranks of, peoplcpayto the military, of whatevernation, £irovided they make any figure.; and the num- ber RUSSIA, t4^ htr of my attendants, with their being fo well armed, and the various languages we fpoke, feemed to imprefs the people \dth a notion> that I was a perfon of very great confequencei The Ruffians have nothing in them that one can properly call civilitVj but I met with the moll pcxfect obfequioufnefs and obedience s and having provided myfelf with good bread, I lived upon excellent fifh, throughout the journey. ^ bout Novogorod, the country is part of it cultivated, but the inclofures are thin, and there do not feem to be any great exertions of induflry in it, but the foil appears to be a fine, deep, rich loam. September the i ith, I got to Midna, which is above forty miles. This line of country is beautiful, being in fine, but gentle inequali-- ties, and only fprinkled with fmall woods, and well watered with rivers : there is much cultivated land ; but the harveft was all got in. I faw fome crops of turneps, fuch as are common in Sweden, and as fine, but the people feem to be very miferable. Many of the peafants have farms, but then they can only work them, v/hen their landlords allow: . three or four days in the week, they labour on the lands of their mafters, finding fometimes cattle and implements, in confideration of being allowed the reft of their time on their L 3 own 15© TRAVELS THROUGH O'vvn farms ; yet for thefe, they pay a conli- derable rent in producls, and are befides open to the fupplying all military travellers with Jiorfes, for which they get a very fpare allow- ance, and fometimes nothing at all. In a word, their flate is fo little better, than the common labourers, who work conftantly for their lords, that I did not find it a matter of envy to the latter. The 1 2th I reached Thedray, a little town, prettily fituated near a river, the fame country continuing for forty-four miles, and much of \t tolerably well cultivated. I paflTed through feveral very extenfive plains of meadow, that appeared very fine, but were not well ilocked with cattle. The villages feem very well peopled. The 1 4th I got to Twera, which is a con- fiderable town on the river Wolga, the dif- tance above eighty miles. The peafants have hitherto furnilhed me very well with horfes ; yet their pay is not three farthings a mile, with fomethirig for the peafant. I have given, to the value of four-pence Englifli for a day's journey, with which they feem to be very well fatisiied; from whence I conjedure, that they ufually have nothing. This line of country is pretty well peopled. 1 paffed through feveral towns, and many villages, with RUSSIA. 151 with fome cultivated country, that was cut into inclofures, and appeared to be kept in good order. Upon making enquiry, they in- formed me, that they cultivated barley, oats, and buck- wheat j and, from the beft conjec- ture I can make, from the intelligence they gave me, in Ruflian weight and meafure, to the amount of between two and three quar- ters Englifh per acre. All the lands, that are in culture here, belong to the nobility, whofe agents manage them with the peafants : but fome which they pointed out at a diftance, be- longed to others, who, I found, were pofTeiTors pf the land, but not nobles ; in other words, gentlemen . It was with fome difficulty, that I could get my two foldiers to behave with any decency to the peafants ; they were al- ways ready for giving them a blow^ when gentle words would do to the full as well; but I curbed this licentioufnefs, which gave me a clear idea of the government of Ruflla, and, at the fame time, convinced me, that all the Emprefs's fine fchemes for encouraging agriculture mufl inevitably come to nothing. Thepeafant, who concluded me toTwera, told me, on the road, that fuch a track of land was his father's farm : that it belonged to o Ilim, not being hired of any landlord; and would, after his father's death, come to him. L 4 I faid^ 152 TRAVELS THROUGH I faid, then he would have an opportunity of living much better, and being more comfort- able than at prefent. He replied, no ; that if he got any thing, the Count Woronofkoy woiild take it, for there was a payment (which I took to be in the nature of a quit-reiU) to him out of it. I obferved feveral good tracks, that v/ere arable ; he faid, that his fa- ther's land was chiefly meadow, but he hired fome ploughed ground of the Count , and I found, that the rent of good arable land was two {hillings an acre, that was in regular culture. But this is not a mark of great cheapnefs, the prices of all produdls being proportionate; for good bread is, through this country, at about a farthing a pound, and mutton and beef fomething better than three farthings, but under a penny ; fo that every thing elfe muft of courfe be proportionate. And a farmer muft cultivate a large track of ground to raife a fmall fum of money ; but the cafe is, that money is fo valuable, that they raife no more produ6ls, than neceffary for their common purpofes and rent, and thefmall fum they bring, anfwers, where all things are proportioned. I found from this man's account, that a farmer, who lived upon his own eftate, was at the mercy of the neareft nobleman, and, if he grew rich, would furely R \J S S I A. 153 jbe fleeced by him. It is impoiiible to intro.. iduce improvements into fuch a country^ V^ithout an entire new fyilem. As 1 advanced in my journey, I every where made enquiries after new fettlements on the Jand,s, belonging to the Emprefs ; but heard Ijothing of them, till I got to Twera ; there they toid me, that in the foreft of Volkouikile, ,^bout an hundred miles to the fouth-vvefl, was a very krge new colony of Poles, fettled at the expenee of the Czarina. I immedi- ately determined to go out of my way to view it, that I might have an opportunity to fee, in what manner they were hxed, and what a reception they met witli. I got there the 1 6th, palling through a country, the chief of which is wafte, being either foreft or mea- dow, but with few villages. I found the fet- tlement of Poles, confifted of about fix hun- dred families, and pleafed me better, than any thing I had. feen in Ruffia. Each family has a fmall, but not a bad houfe, built of wood, and covered with fhingles ; a houfe as good or better, than the generality of fmall farm-houfes in England, where the mud walls would give foreigners an idea, that we were the poorefl nation in Europe. Behind every houfe was an inclofure of about fifty Englifli acres in one field. The fence was 4- ditch 1754' T RAVELS THROUGH ditch and parapet, with a row of young plants for a hedgs, that feemed to be a kind of elm» Each inclofure came down to a rivulet, where eattle might water. Each family had two flieep, and a ram, to a certain number, a cow, and a couple of oxen to till the arable, with a cart and a plough ; all which were at the Emprefs's expence,and do not coft, what they would in England. This may be conceived, when I give the rates. Two oxen for ploughing and carting, come to but five pounds ; a cow to thirty fhillings ; a fheep cighteen-pence ; a plough four fhillings ; a cart nine ihilHngs ; each houfe coft the Em- prefs about four and twenty fhillings ; and every family had an allowance of provifion, the firft year, from the neighbouring country, which coft her nothing -, fo that the total expence, per family, was only eight pounds ten fliillings, and many of the families confift of eight or nine perfons. The farms were all under culture, and fubdivided by the people themfelves 3 and I obferved, that thefe inner fences were done exadly in the fame manner, as the furrounding ones. Some had four iields, others five, and fome fix. The land, when they fettled it, was wafte foreft, but not many trees on it, that yielded a wild and luxu- riant ^rafs : it is a red loam. on clay. . The peafantR R u s SI a; t^^ ficafants cultivate wheat without exception, which they had been ufed to in Poland ; each had one field of it 5 alfo a crop of barley, eats, or rice -, with a piece of beans, and another of turneps. Their farms were in general in good ojder, and they feemed to be extremely diligent and induftrious in their management. Some of them had vaflly in- creafed their cattle, keeping as many, as they pleafed on the adjoining foreft : fome had more than twenty fheep, ten cows, and fix oxen ; but they had greatly increafed their farms, which the Emprefs allows, provided the former portion is all in culture. They all feemed to be perfedly happy, being en- tirely free from all opprefiion by being on the lands of the crown ; and there is no doubt, but they will in time yield a fine revenue, without any fe verity being employed. Some of them had pieces of hemp, which thrives with them fo well, that its culture increafes among them daily. I enquired par- ticularly into the value of an acre, and found, that it was worth upon the fpot from fifty IJiillings to four pounds, which, I think, is very confiderable, and ihews, that thefe new colonies may prove a fource of very great wealth and population. It t56 TRAVELS THROUGH It is extremely evident from this inftancc^ that the way of bringing improvements to bear in Ruffia, is not by encouragements, given to the peafants,unlefs they could at once be fet as free, as in other countries, which^ I am convinced already, is an impoflibility, from what 1 have fcen on this journey ; be- caufe the nobility and other land- owners, to whom they are valTals, fleece and opprefs them to fuch a degree, that they can never be fecure of any property, unlefs their encouragement comes from their own lords. Even they, who are not vafTals, but have pofTeffions of their own, are trampled on by the foldiery. No improvement, by giving them a greater degree of liberty, can therefore have any effed:, un- lefs it comes from their lords ; as in this cafe of the Polifh emigrants. The Emprefs, fixing them upon the crown-lands, they are vafTals of the crown, and all the liberty, flie chufes to give them, they will fecurely enjoy, with- out any one's daring to injure them in any refpe(ft -, and as the fovereign can never pro- fitably cultivate an extenfive domain for her own account, this is the only means of work- ing improvements, and they cannot fail of proving moft highly profitable. And the nobility have it alfo in their power to make the fame improvements upon their own H tj S S t A. 157 own eftates^r becaufe, under their proteclion, the peafants would be fecure. But as to all general improvements in hu{bar}dry,itis mere- ly impoffible, that they fhould be attended with the leaft efFe(5l, Every landlord has every thing in his power upon his own lands, provided, I mean, he be of rank and confe- quence ; and they have the ability, by means of the flavery of their peafants, to work very great, effects, if they pleafed. to undertake iheqi* Laws or edidts therefore muft be di- rected to them : the rewards, for a proper condudt fhould all be granted to them^ the Emprefs fhould addrefs herfelf to them, and let them find favour at court, in proportion to the cultivation of their eflates : thefe are the only means of doing great things. The crown lands are fo amazingly exten- live, that very great things might in this mapner be done, and far more effedually, than by general laws, in a country, where the people are fo habituated to flavery, that it would be a vain attempt to free them under all maflers. Thefe fix hundred families had at once thirty thoufand acres in culture, be- lides the increafc, which, by many of them, was very confiderable ; all which will, iii procefs of time, yield a great revenue to the crown, befidesj the ac(],uifition of flrength, which J58 TRAVELS THROUGIl which the empire receives by the addition of population, and the amount of fo much in- duftry, as all thefe people create. After five years, this colony is to pay an annual rent,- which in ten more will be increafed, and after that, remain a freehold to the Poles, fubjedt only to that rent. An idea of the field, which the Emprefs has for improvement, may be conje6lured by one contiguous track of wafle and foreft, partly in the Ziranni province, which contains above thirty-feven millions of Englifh acres, and belongs to the crown, be- fides tracks in Siberia and Tartary, ten times as large. It is therefore extremely evident, that the great object of Ruffian politicks fhould be the peopling and cultivating the crown lands ; which, if managed with un- remitted diligence, and without fparing ex- pence, might be continually on the improv^" ment, and in fuch fwift manner, that the quantity of land, rendered profitable, might foon be immenfely great. This colony of Poles have a market in the middle of their fettlement on the great roadj where merchants refort to buy their fparepro- du6ts, hemp, &c. bringing all thofe forts of commodities, which they want -, and this trade occafions a circulation among them* which is highly advantageous. The report of ±1 , U S S I A. J5^ of the indulgence and benefits, they have met with, has had great efFedt in Poland j fo that they pointed out to me a track of land con- tiguouSjwheretheyfoonexpecledtwo hundred families more. Having viewed feveral farms cf the fettlers, and made fuch enquiries as I thought necefTary, I fet out forMofcow with- out returning to Twera, the diflance is one hundred and feventeen miles; and I arrived there the 20 th, pafling through a very finely variegated, country, well watered and wood- ed, and fpread in fine plains, with many vil- lages fcattered through them, and much ap- pearance of cultivation: all this country is ii% the hands of three or four nobles, whofe ftew- ards dire6t the management of it. This city is the greateil in the empire ; it ivas once firongly fortified for this part of the world, but the fecurity of the prefent times has made every thing unnecefiTary, except a wall : It is about fixteen miles in circumfe- rence, and contains about half a million of inhabitants; till lately, the^Czars fpent a part of the year here -, but the palace, which is a very indifferent one, having, been damaged by fire, they have not of late years been there^ but notwithftanding this, Mofcow is the re- fidence of a vaft number of the nobility, in- deed;, of three fourths of thofe, whofe offices OF t6o TRAVELS THROUGIt or expedations do not oblige them to attend the court; in which inflance, there is a greater' appearance of Hberty , than in moft other coun- tries ; for in general, all the nobility of a kingdom flock to the feat of goverment. Mofcow is very irregularly built -, but it is jtbeautiful city, from the windings of the river, and from many eminences which are covered with groves of fine tall trees, and froril hu^ merous gardens, and la wns> which, opening to the water, give it a moil pleafing airy ap* pearance. I expeded to fee nothing, but wood- en houfes, but was agreeably furprized at tha light of many very fine fabricks of brick and flone. It is beyond comparifon a finer city than Peteriburg. The number of churches and chapels, amounting, it is faid, to eighteen hundred, make a great figure in the printed defcriptions of this city; but from the appear- ance of them, I fhould fuppofe the fa(5l falfe, and that out of great numbers, very few are worthy of note. I faw the great bell, which is the larged in the world, and indeed a mod ftupendous thing it is. They have many other bells in the city, which much exceed any thing, that is elfev/here to be met with; the Ruffians being remarkably fond of this ornament of their churches. There R U S S I A. i6i There is a very confiderable manu failure at Mofcow of various hemp fabricks ; particu- larly, fail cloth and iheeting, which employs fome thoufaiids of looms, and many thou- sands of people ; the hemp is, moft of it, brought from the Ukraine : there are alio great numbers of confiderable merchants here, who carry on a very extenfive commerce v/ith all parts of the empire; for there is water car- riage from hence to the Black and Cafpian feas, and with but few interruptions to the Baltick alfb, which are circumftances, that make it the center of a very great commerce'. This city is much better fituated for the metropolis of the empire than Peterfburg: It is almofl in the center of the mofl cultivated parts of it; communicating, in the manner above-mentioned, with the three inland feas, not at a great diflance from the moft impor- tant province of the empire, the Ukraine ; open to the fbuthern territories on the Black fea, and by means of the rivers Wolga and the Don, commanding an inland navigation of prodigious extent. Its vicinity alfo to the countries, which mufl always be the feat of any wars with the Turks, the enemies, moft to be attended to of all thofe with whom the Ruflians wage war; make it, upon the whole, infinitely a better fituatioii for the feat of go- VoL. Ill, M vemmenty 362 TRAVELS THROUGH vernment, than that of Peterfburg, which is at the very extremity of the empire, and pofleffing few of thefe advantages. Found- ing that city, and making it the feat of foreign commerce and naval power, was an admira- ble exertion of genius ! but the feat of govern- ment fhould always have been at Mofcow. The 23d I left that city, taking the road to- wards the Ukraine: I was fortunate in having very fine clear weather, and found the roads, every where, exceedingly good, no autumnal rains having yet fallen. I got that night to .Molalky,the dlllance about fixty miles, nor did 1 find llich a day's journey, too much for the horfes ; the country, all this way, is a level plain, very fertile, and much of it well culti- vated, with many villages, and, in general, a well peopled territory: the peafants feemed tolerably eafy, but fcarcely any of them have flny property. From Molafky , fifty hx miles carried iiie the next day to Arcroily, a fmall town, fituated in a territory iiot ibwell peopled as the preceding; the villages thinner, and but little of the foil cultivated, being covered with much timbcrofgreatiize and beauty. The 25th rreachedDemetriovitz,at the diftance of more than fifty miles, every ftep of which was aero fs a forcfl:, in which I faw not the leaft veftigc of any habitation ; the road was not difficult to find, even RUSSIA. 163 even if I had not had a guide, but it is not much frequented; the mercantile people mak- ing this part of the journey to the Ukraine by water : This immenfe track of wild country, is part open meadow and part covered with tim- ber, which would in England be thought a glorious light : the foil is all a fine fand, and, if I may judge from the Ipontaneous vegetation, a mofl fertile loam ; fo that nothing is want- ing, but an induftrious population : but with- out that, the whole territory is of little worth. I baited the horfes in the middle of the foreft, and refrefhed myfelf and company, much admiring the uncommon extent of country, that was v/ithout the leaft appearance of being inhabited : I apprehended, that the country muft have great refemblance of the bound- lefs plains and woods of Louifiana. The 26th, I rode forty miles through an uninhabited plain to Sereniky ; no timber in it, but all one level fertile meadow. I iaw Ibme herds of cattle feeding, as if wild, but the land was not a tenth part flocked ; for the grafs, if we turned out of the road, w^as up al- mofl to the bellies of the horfes ; fuch mea- dow would, I apprehend, in any part of Eng- land, let readily for five and twenty fhillings an acre, yet here of no value : fuch are the elfeds of population, liberty, and induflry! M 2 The t64 travels through The fame dlftance the 27th carried me to Brenlky a pretty little town on the banks of a river, ni the niiddle of. a foreft; a place, truly romantic. 1 felt myfelf rather fatigued with hard riding, fmce I left Peterfburg, and therefore refted mylelf here, the 28th, left a continuance of this great exercife (hould give me a fit of illnefs, for which Ruflia is the moft unfk place m the world; for every man, out of P££erlburg and Mofcow, muft be his own phylician. The 2^9th, I got to StaradofF, at tlie diftance ©f fifty miles : full twenty of which, are ghrough- a rich and pleafant country, much of it very well cultivated; they were getting in part of their harveft : they cultivate all the •gFai-n and pulfe^ common in England ; and from what I faw, I have little doubt, but their hivib^ndry ia extremely good. They generally manage their lands in the fyftem of fowing firft, hemp, then oats, then turneps, then wheat or rye, but much of the former is fown : after thishufbandry of fiveycars, which islbme- •tlmcs varied to lix or feven, two crops of hemp 4>eing taken, they leave the land fallow for three four, or hve years; by fallow, is not however meant, ploughing it all that time, but lettingit run to grafs and, weeds: it is prcfently covcr- ■^(\ thickly; the iccond year, all the weeds uifappear. R U^ S- S I A. 165 difappear, and they have a very iirie meadow, without the trouble of fowii-ig any hay feeds, which they keep, as the feedinggrouiid of their farms for feveral years, as their cattle require; and whenever they plough it up again, they are fure to find a field, entirely fertilized and rea- dy to yield abundant crops. I ftiould h^vo ap- prehended, that this management would have filled the land with the i^eds of weeds, which, ypon breaking it up,- would have deflroyed their Crop; but an agent-, that ieemed to belong £0 fomemanofalargeeftate, anfwered me by faying, that the fird crop, they fowed, being hemp, entirely cleaned the ground for all the fucceflive oiies; that in cafe the efFe£l was not perfeded, a-fecond would infallibly doit; for i found, they had an idea here, that hemp is a great cleaner of the i-aiwl, and that no weeds can live among it ; which is, what I do not re- eolleft, any writer of hufbandry mentions, as being the pradlice of Engliih farmers. It is one inftance, among mtany others, I have met with^ in which 1 regret, not making Hiyfelf better acquainted with the hufbandry of England, before I made enquiries into that of other countries'. • The quantity of hemp, fown in all this country is very confi- derable; indeed 1 was told, that this province, which joins a part of the Ukraine in lome M 3 pkc.s, i66 TRAVELS" THROUGH places, ;s much like that country, only the foil not quite fo fine. The land here is a rich loam , wet, and much inclinable to a clay. They reckon an acre of hemp, one year -with ano-. ther, to be worth three pounds ; an acre of wheat yields three quarters, and as much of rye; four quarters of barley, and as much or more of oats. They have fine crops of beans, about five quarters upon an acre. They do not cultivate fo many turneps as they fhould, but trufl many of their cattle all winter long on thewafle, where they find herbage enough, iiotwithftandingthe fnow, to keep them alive: but it would certainly be much better huiban- dry to keep them better, and colle6l their dung. They have large herds, which in fummer are kept in fine order, by means of the exceeding goodpaflurage, which all themeadowsyield in vaft plenty. All this country belongs to different noblemen, and is cultivated by their flew* ards and agents, who fecm to know their bufinefs very well ; but the peafants feem to be very poor, having fcarcely any figns of cultivation around their cottages, and. yet they are fed by what they raife for themfelves on certain days. I remark, that the peafants In this empire, are in general happy, in pro- portion to the negledl under which the coun- try lies ; in the midfl of vafl wafles and fo- rces R U S S I A. ' 167 refts they {eem to be tolerably eafy ; but any tracks well cultivated, are done at their ex^ pence, and they appear very near on the fame rank, as the blacks in our fugar colonies. From StaradofFto Czernicheu, is feventy- five miles, which I rode in two days, arriving there the ift of November. Part of this track is as well cultivated, as that on the other fide of StaradofF, but much of it is covered with fo- reft.- I obferved hemp in many of the fields, and fome of it was not yet pulled, though the harveft is generally in. Czernicheu is a very well built town, finely fituated on the banks of the river Defna, which is navigable for barges of fifty tons, is very well fortified, and inhabited by about fifteen thoufand peo- pfe many of whom carry on a confiderable trade with Kiovia, and, by the Nieper, with Poland. All the track of country, which lies upon the river Defna, is very rich, and vi^ell cultivated. Many of the inhabitants of Czeirnicheu are Coflack Tartars; but a traveller has no more realbn to fear them, than the inhabitants of any other part of Ruffia ; for the government, although milder in the Ukraine, and the neighbouring provinces,'- ffom having been conquered from Po- land, is yet the fame, and the police as flrid ■ '■ M 4 'as ,6S TRAVELS T H Jl O U G H as ill ?aiy other part of the empire. I mado enquiries here concerning the danger of tra^ veUing through the Ukraine in this time of war ; and they affured me, that whether it was war or peace, I ihould not fee the leaft appearance of any danger ; that I ihould find the Ukraine, tho' inhabited by Tartars, as w^eilregulatedaprovince, as any county in Eng-f land. They faid, there had been no incur- fions made into any of thefe provinces, as the theatre of the war was pufhed on to the coun- tries around the Black fea, and where they doubted not but it would continue. November the 3d, I reached Kiovia, tho capital of the Ukraine, ^nd fourfcore miles from Czernichfeu, The road leads on the banks of the Defna, through a beautiful coun- try; great part of it being well peopled and cultivated. It is inhabited by Tartarian de-» fcendants; but I found the prefent CalTocks, who have very little ideaqf hufbandry, come far from the eaftward, from countries, that reach to the river Don, at the diftance of above a thoufand miles from hence. The- prefent race of the; Ukraine are a civilized people, and the befl hufbandmen in the Ruf- jian empire. Kiovia, one of themoftconfiderable cities I have (ecn in Ruflia, is a place, well known in the RUSSIA. ,169 the hiflory of that empire ; for tho' it has been fubje6tto many revolutions, which: reduced it to a low ftate, compared with its former gran*» jdeur, yet it has now recovered all thofe an^ tient blows; it is well built of brick and flone; the ftreets are wide and ftrajt, and well paved ; it has a very noble cathedral, much of it lately rebuilt and eleven other churches. It has forty thoufand inhabitants ; and is flrongly fortified. The Nieper is here a noble river^ gnd feveral larger rivers falling into it, aftet wafhing fome of the richeft provinces of Po* land, enable this town to carry on a very con- iiderable commerce. It is the grand maga-* zine of all the commodities of the Ukraine, particularly hemp and flax, which, in this fine province, are raifed in greater quantities, and of a better <^uality, than in any other part of Europe. The Ukraine is the richeft pro- vince in the Ruffian empire. Part of it for- merly was a province of Poland, and the reft an independent fovereignty, under a Tartar prince; but the v/hole is now a mere province ©f Ruffia, and much the richeft acquifition, that crown has made. It is upon an average, two hundred and fifty miles long, eaft to weft ; and one hundred and forty broad, north to fcuth, November 170 TRAVELS THROUGH November 5 th, I left the capital of this pro* vince; and as I purpofed making a circular de- tour of the weflern part, I went to Buda that day, which is about fifty miles ; moft of the country rich and very well cultivated; the foil is a black loam, and they raife in it the various forts of grain and pulfe, that are commonly met with in England. I pafled through great tracks of ftubble ground, from off which the wheat, barley, and oats were carried. And 1 obferved numerous hemp grounds, though not fo much of the country is under that crop, as corn ; in fome villages, where I made en- quiries, they fpoke nothing but the Polifh language, and of a dialed:, which my inter- preter, the Ruffian, knew nothing of, though he had afiured me, he underflood Polifli very well; but I met with other peafants, who Ipoke Ruffian, and they informed me, that their products ef hemp arofe in value fometimes to fix pounds an acre, but three or four pounds were a common crop ; of wheat, four quarters ; barley, five, and oats and beans fix, and fome- times more an acre ; which appeared to me to be all very confidcrablc quantities. Their grounds arc moll of them inclofod with ditch- es, to fome of which are hedges, but not to all. They have fine meadow grounds, which they- convert to hemp, in the manner I related a~ bove. H U S S I A. -* lyi bove, but leave them under grais for ten or twelve years, before they break, them up; and keep them in a tillage management, as long : upon Ibme grounds, they have three crops of hemp, running. Flax they alfo cul- tivate, but they do not reckon it fo profitable as hemp. In the management of their cattle^ they are very good farmers : they have large ftocks, and they, houfe them all, whenever the fnow is above four, inches deep upon the grounds they litter them down iWell with ftraw, and feed them with hay or turneps : cows are their principal ftock ; and they fell immenfe quantities of butter and cheeie, though it is extremely remarkable, that, not many ye.ars ago, they knew not what butter was. The property of all this country is very much divided; here are very few great eftates belonging to nobility :,the old inhabitants of the country were very free, and had a great equality among them; and this, in pofleffions, as well as other circumftances ; and fortu- nately, this continues, though in fubje^liori to Ruflia; mod of the peafants are little far- mers, ,whofe farms, are their own,- with ten times the liberty among them, that I any where elfe faw in Ruffia ; the government are extremely cautious- of oppreffing or offend- ing them, for they never, will be in want of folicitations 172 TRAVELS THROUGH Iblicitations from the Turks to join the Tar- tars in alliance with the Porte. They pay a, coniiderable tribute, but raiie it among them- felves according to their own cuftoms ; and they alfo furnifli the Ruffian armies with a great many very faithful troops. Thefe points, with the immenfe value of the trade the Ruf- fians carry on by means of their products, hemp and flax in particular, render the pro- vince of the firft importance. I pafled, in this line of fifty miles, great numbers of villages and fcattered farms. Buda is a little town, or rather a large vil- lage, prettily fituated, between two rivers in a country^' perfectly pleafant. I turned off to the north-wefl:, and got the 6th to Kordyne, a little town, fifty two miles from Buda; All this country is equal to the preceding day's journey ; I never faw a track of land, that had more refemblance to the befl parts of Eng- land. Nothing could be more fortunate, than the weather for my expedition; the rains ufuw ally come very heavy the middle of Septem- ber, and foon after them, frofls and fnow, but I have ytt had a confl:ant azure Iky, with warm winds. If it holds five days more, 1 ihall have paiTed this province, and i do not hear, that there is any thing worthy of notice between the Ukraine and Feterfburg, there- for'" R U S SI A. 173 fore the weather will not be fo eiTeiitial to the journey, I remarked, in the country I paiTed to day, feveral tobacco plantations; they re- femblehopgrounds, when the hillocks are not poled; they reckon it as profitable, as hemp, which is owing, I believe, to the ready vent, they find, for all they cultivate; the Tartars upon the Black fea, and the Kalmucks buy large quantities; and they are not fo nice in the feparation of the forts, as our planters in Virginia are obliged to be, though they fell their produ6l for as good a price ; but I do not think there grows the lefs hemp, on account of their tobacco ; it feems to be cultivated, in- ftead of fowing quite fo much corn as in other parts; an acre of tobacco is worth five pounds in a good year. They have large houfes, highly run up for drying it. They think, the laud cannot be too rich either for hemp or tobacco, and acccordingly plant them on freih land. The 7th, I reached Lefzo:2:yn, at the dif- tance of fix and thirty miles, the countf-y continuing the fame ; much hemp and to^ bacco being planted through the whole: At a village, by the way, where I flopped to make enquiries, I found they preferred^ a red day for their hemp;, and planted all the black mould with tobacco. I obferved many ploughs 174 TRAVELS THROUGH at work, fome with fix horfes, of a little weak breed, but in general, each was drawn by four ftout oxen. They were turning up wheat ftubbles, and faid, they ploughed them before winter, that the frofts and fnow might improve the ground, which feems to be good manage- ment. I think, I never faw fuch deep plough- ing, as thefe peafants give their ground : I mea- fured nine inches perpendicular after a plough drawn by four oxen ; what the depth is in England, I never noticed particularly, but be- lieve it is not fo much as this. Their ploughs are very well conf1:ru6led ; if I may judge by their entirely turning over the land, they are all of iron, having no wood about them; a fort I had never feen till I came into the Ukraine; nor have they any wheels which our plough- wrights in England, think fo eflential. I re- marked here feveral very noble crops of cab- bages, and in fuch vaft quantities, that I con- cluded, they muft feed their cattle with them, and was right in the conjecture : they ufed formerly, to cultivate only the Swedifh turnep for this purpofe, but cabbages (they are a red fort, and come to a monftrous fize, 25 or 3olb. forinftance) by degrees, have come into falhlon among them, fo as to be the crop, on which they entirely depend, with help of hay for the winter fuftenance of their cattle. They fow RUSSIA. 175 ibwthe feed early in the fpring,and plant them when of a proper fize, into the fields in rows, and afterwards keep them as clean as they do their tobacco, by conftant hoeing : an acre of them will winter four or five large oxen ; they reckon the culture extremely profitable. They have alfo whole fields of potatoes, ibme for their own ufe, and fome for fale, there being a great demand for them at Ockzacow, on the Black fea, whither they are fent by water; but I cannot help thinking they muft have a fort unknown in England : I rode into a field where a crop was taking up, and great numbers were as large, as the body of a quart bottle ; I never faw fuch before. They freely gave me a few of thefe large ones to take away for feed ; they are planted by flices in the fame manner, as ours : the peafants here think, that lands of moderate fertility do for them. Such a potatoe, I {hould apprehend, might, for feeding cattle, be made of very great advantage to the hufbandry of England ; they yield from twelve to fifteen hundred bufhels per acre. The 8th, I rode to Kwalbwa, a large village, the diilance about forty miles. This country, is, in fome places, a conti- nued level plain ; in others, it is variegated with gentle hills, which never rife into mouu- 176 TRAVELS THROUGH rnountains, but are cultivated to the tops. jHemp and tobacco are common crops thro* the whole, and alfo fome flax, but not in equal quantities. All the country is divided into fmall eftates, or rather farms, cultivated by the owners ; though I am told, that in fome parts of the province to the fouth, where I have not been, there are large eftates belong- ing to the nobles, and that thofe parts are not near fb well peopled or cultivated, as thefe parts; which is a flrong proof, that much of the good hufbandry met with in the Ukraine, is owing to the peafants, being owners of tlieir iands, and vaflalage, almofl unknown in the province. It cannot be doubted, but the Em- prefs may bring the crown lands of Ruflia, on all the frontier of Poland, into asflourifhing a ftate, as any parts of this province, if fhe 'encourages foreign fettlers with all the Ipirit, Ihe has hitherto (hewn, fnice it is in her power to give them all the advantages, which the inhabitants of the Ukraine enjoy. They ,liave, it is true, a noble country, equal, I think, in foil, &c. to Flanders, and almoft as well cultivated; but I have feen, in other pro- vinces of this empire, immenfe wafte tracks of land, not at all inferior in every thing, derived from nature; but enflavcd pealants are utterly inconftftcnt with a flourifliing hufbandry. 'The RUSSIA, 177 The 9th I got to Norodiza, the diftance forty miles : the foil, in this track, is inferior to what I have pafTed, but the people appear , to be excellent hufbandmen : they have fome hemp, but little tobacco, only a plantation here and there. I palTed thro' feveral villages which have been lately built by fugitive Poles, who had fixed themfelves here on fome fmall waftes, by leave of the government, but with- out any expence. The loth I had a very hard day's journey to Belechoka, the diftance more than fixty miles, and the road in fome places marlliy. Some parts of this track are well cultivated, but no hemp, flax, or to- bacco are raifed j there are alfo ibme waftes, but they will not be fuch long, for the Poles are planting themfelves on them very faft. Here I paffed out of the province of Ukraine. It is this territory which raifes nine tenths of the hemp and flax which we import at fuch a vaft expence from Ruflia -, it is therefore deferving of a little attention ; for the bell politicians, who have given moft attention to the affairs of our American colonies, have all of them infifted very ftrenuoufly upon the pofllbility, and even eafe of fupplying our- felves totally from thence. What truth there is in this I know not; but it will be of u/e to confider this province of the Ukraine with Vol. III. N more 178 TRAVELS THROUGH more attention thart any writer has hithertrc? done, bccaufe, from knowing it perfedly, wc may judge how far we can reafon by ana- logy, when America is fpoken of; and this h the more necefTary, as the accounts which havehithertobeenpublifhedofit areflrangely tontradiftory; for, on one hand, they tell us truly that the RulTian hemp comes from thence ; but on the other, they give fuch a pitlure of the flate of the country, that one would fuppofe it, poffefTed by herds of wan- dering Cofiacks, which is utterly inconfiftent with the idea of fuch a fbate of agriculture, as is necelTary for making fo great a proficiency in the culture of hemp and flax. All thefe accounts muft have been copied one from another, and the firft of them, at leaft, a cen- tury and half old. To be convinced of which let any perfon look into the account of the Ukraine, in that very judicious collection of voyages and travels, entitled Harris's, there he will meet with mention, indeed, of the great fertility of the country, but three- fourths of the particulars given are relative to its wandering Tartar inhabitants, and the words hemp or flax, never once ufed ; and a defcription of the people given, that would be utterly inconfiftent with fuch agriculture; jukI this is the cafe with all the books that I have RUSSIA. 179 turned to^ but the reafon muft be, the country's being fo extremely out of the way of all travellers, that not a perfon, in a century goes to it, who takes notes of his obfervations with intention to lay them before the world : very few fuch go even to Peteriburgh ; now and then one crofTes Ruffia towards Perfia, but all keep a thoufand or two of miles from the Ukraine; and hence it is, that thegreatefl changes happen in fuch remote parts of the world, without any thing of the matter being known. And our writers of geography, who are every day publifhing, copy each other in fo lavifh a manner> that a fa6l in 1578 is handed down to us as the only information we can have in 1766 ; a circumftance, which reigns in all the books of general geography that I have fetn. Let me here add, that I have, in travelling to gain information, vilited thofe countries, about which it would be in vain to confult books 3 for, Holland and Flanders alone excepted, all the reft of the -prefent journey is through countries, the for- mer accounts of which are entirely falfe, not from errors in the authors, but from great changes that have happened in a long courfe of years. But to return. It has been fuppofed, that hemp and flax, coming to us from fo northern a place as Pe- N 2 terfburg, j8o travels through terfburg, would grow in the midll of perpetual frofts and fnows ; but though we import it from latitude 60, yet it all grows in the Ukraine, which lies between kt. 47 and 52, and is befides as fine, mild a climate, as any in Europe: this is the latitude of the fouth ©f France; and with tbefe advantages the foil is fuperior to moft I have feen,. being, in gene- ral, a very rich, deep mould, between a loam and a dry clay, but without any of that tena- cious ftickinefs,. which is fo difagreeable in moving through a clay country in England, I am clear in the importance of conveying a precife idea, when we fpeak of foils ; but not having been ufed to pra6lical hufbandry fo much, as I wifh I had, I cannot properly make ufe of the neceffary technical terms. To thefe advantages, which this province en- joys, I (liould certainly add, whether from accident or natural ingenuity,, their good hufbandry, which is much fuperior to any thing, that I have feen, fmce I left Flanders, After giving thefe particulars, we may ex- amine, upon a goodfoundation, the capability of our colonies, affording hemp and flax in equal quantities. Thofe gentlemen who have travelled through them, bell know how weH they anfwer to the above defcription : but if I may be permitted to fpeak on the authorities which RUSSIA. i8e which many modern reiations give us, the fettlements on the fea-coafts of North- Ame- rica will never yield hemp in any quantities! the climate is much too changeable and fe- vere ; fharp cutting frofts are met with in Carolina, in 30 degrees of latitude, and a burning fun, equal in heat to any part of the world : in New England, Nova Scotia, &c. where hemp has been attempted, it has al- ways failed, from the feverity of the climate, and the badnefs of the lands. But all accounts give a very contrary defcription of the coun- tries on the Miffifippi : from the defcriptions which I have read of the track on that river, from lat. 33 to lat. 40, 1 Ihould apprehend it to be, of all other places in America, the moffc adapted to this culture : for the foil is rich, black, and very deep; the climate much more regular and pleafant than on the fea-coafl, which is all marfhes and fwamps, and the lands in immenfe plenty, and all frefh. Hemp certainly might be raifed in thofe parts to great advantage, provided the defcriptions of them, which we have had> are jufi: ^ which I do not fee any reafon to doubt. But then the misfortune is, that thefe beautiful tracks of country arewithout inhabitants j andgreat numbers of people are necelTary for an advan- tageous culture of henap. Another circun^r . N 3 fiance jg2 TRAVELS THROUGH ftance to be confidered is, the profit of fuch an application of the land: hemp would never be cultivated to any purpofe in Carolina, or our fouthern colonies, if the climate was pro-! per, becaufe rice and indico, and I believe, even cotton, pay the planter, much fuperior profits; and if indico and cotton were intro- duced on the Millifippi, as, in all probability they would be, hemp would be negleded till thofe markets failed which took off the more beneficial articles. But, on the other hand, we ought not to regret this, for the national profit is proportionably (greater : the more the planter's advantage, the more the national income is increafed. Hemp, in fadl, is not an article of culture, that is comparable to many others in profit, and will confequently never be cultivated, except in thofe countries where corn and pulfe, and other lefs profita- ble articles, would occupy the land, if that did not j but when the foil and climate will do for richer commodities, it is idle to fup- pofe, that poorer ones will be attended to. If, therefore, it is an efiential point to raife all the hemp in our colonies, which we bring from Rufiia, new plantations mufl be formed on the Miflifippi, in a latitude, that will not do for the rich American fiables ; fuch for inftance, as that of 37 to 40, or thereabouts. The H U S S I A. 183 The country, fo included, is one of the fineffc in the world for all common hufbandry -, fo that the inhabitants, like thofe of the Ukraine, would very eafily raife all the neceifaries of life, at the fame time, that their principal attention was given to hemp as their jftapje. C H A P. VI. Journey to Peterjhurg through the Frontiers oj Poland — Ohfervat'wns on the State of fever al Provinces — R ujjian Acquijitions — R em arks on the War between the RuJJians and the ^ Turks— Journey to Archangel, and through Lapland — Return to Peterjhufg — Ltivonia, NOVEMBER the i ith, I left Belechoka, and rode to Rzeezyka, at the diftance of forty- four miles through a country very different from the Ukraine; for it confifls of little befides marflies, with but few inhabi- tants. It is to be noted, that mofi: of this track is in Poland, and Rzeezyka is the capital of a province, once Polifli, and which, all the maps I have, lay down as a part of Poland; but I am convinced, there have been ftrange changes v^rought by force of Ruffian arms on the frontiers of that king- dom. The town is large, populous,- and N 4 ilrongly 284 TRAVELS THROUGH ftrongly fortified; but as much Ruffian, as Mofcow. Here are great numbers of Poles, it is true -, but all the houfes, which the war had emptied, are filled up carefully with Ruf- fian families; and there is a Ruffian garrifon, Ruflian government, and, in a word, fcarcely any thing Polifh in it. By this extreme poli- tical conduct, that empire makes very great acquifitions on the fide of Poland, without the world knowing any thing of the mattery which is the effect of the miferable govern- ment, or rather anarchy, under which they live; and which is the pretence for the Ruf- fian troops, fwarming over the whole king- dom ; fo that three parts in four of it are a province of Ruflia, and probably, the whole will in a little time, which may be more adv.mtageous to the kingdom j for no depotifm of the Eafl is fo great a curfe to a people, as the furious military anarchy, that reigns at prefent in Poland. I have re- ceived accounts from various people, fmce I have been in Ruflia, from which I fhould apprehend, that full half the inhabitants of that great country, have been cut off and flarved within thefe ten years. Near half the kingdom is abfolutely in the hands of the Ruffians, who receive pretty heavy taxes from it, and alfo recruits for their army againft the R U S S I A; 12$ the Turks : vaft numbers of people are, by this means, alfo tranfported into RufTia ; for Polifli noblemen, who declare againft the Ruffian party, are driven entirely from their cftates, and great numbers of their peafants removed immediately into Ruffia, with their cattle and all their effedls ; fo that the Em- prefs may ealily have increafed her fubje6ls in the degree, which I was told, at Peterfburg. And it certainly muft be allowed, that the cards fhe plaj'^s in this manner, enfure her a game uncommonly advantageous. The poor Poles, driven about, andreducedtothe utmoft mifery by their own people, muft be very ready to fix upon lands in Ruffia, and be vaffals only to the Emprefs. If this fcene of confufion therefore lafls much longer in Po- land, that kingdom will be entirely depopu- lated, and the Ruffian provinces filled with people; an event, filently taking place, and which will increafe this formidable power more, than half a dozen vidtories over the Turks. From Rzeezyka, I followed the courfe of the Nieper to Rohakzow, where I arrived the 1 2th ; the diflance more than fifty miles. The country is an open level plain, of fine meadow. I faw numerous villages deferted; and the fields, formerly arable, become paf- ture. 7^6 TRAVELS THUOUGH ture, but without cattle to graze them : all the inhabitants were moved into Ruflia. That town is the capital of a large province, the whole of which is in the hands of the Ruffians, who have three ftrong fortrefTes in it, well garrifoned. Rohakzow is a fine town, beautifully lituated on the Nieper, on which its prefent mafters carry on a confider- able commerce. I much fufpe6l, from the fortifications raifedhere by the Ruffians, whe- ther the town or province will ever be more in the hands of the Poles. I was informed here, that much the greateft part of the province of, Minfki, one of the moft confiderable in Li- thuania, is entirely quiet, and in the abfolute power of the Ruffians j and where it will end, time can only know ; but the prefent ilate of affairs in all this part of the world, looks on every fide, only in favour of the Ruffians ^ and it is certainly a moil ftrange infatuation, that the other powers of Europe fhould be mere ftanders'by, and look on to this great fuccefs of the Ruffians, without thinking it their in- tereft to interfere. Auftria and Pruffia are armed, it is true ; but the progrefs of this empire is of a kind, which admits not open declaration from any, but the Poles. I have heard it mentioned, as a mark of very laga- cious politicks in the Turks, that the real reafon R U S S I Av 187 reafon of the prefent war with Ruffia is from a jealoufy of the Mufcovite power, being too much increafed by the advantages taken of the troubles in Poland. The Porte thought there was danger of the Emprefs taking pof- feffion of the whole kingdom of Poland in her own name j and judged that the beft way ©f preventing fuch a great accefsion to her power, was by the fword, cutting her out work el fe where. From Rohakzow, I reached Rychow, the 13th, the diftance more than forty miles. All this country is very rich, and part of it very well cultivated, but it is in the hands of the Rufsians entirely; many of the peafants are of that nation, and every thing feen, is a proof, that this empire has much enlarged its bounds, without either a formal war, or even the authority of a treaty. This place is in the province of Miflau, a very fine and fertile country, an hundred miles long, and as many broad, and all in the hands of the Ruffians. The foil here is chiefly a reeddifhloam; much of it is in culture, as was evident, from the large tracks of ftubble I went through; but I faw no hemp, flax, or tobacco, thofe produ6ls being pretty much confined to the Ukraine. Rychow, with fome neighbouring towns, be- long to a Polifh nobleman, driven away by the iU TRAVELS THROUGH the Ruffians, who have feized his whole eflate: and taken poflefTion of it in a manner, that precludes the idea of his ever returning. From this place, I rode about forty miles to Kudzin, through the fame province. All this line of country, I could fee, had been in ge- neral under culture, but it was now entirely walle. I counted the remains of no lefs than leven villages, which were entirely deferted, all the inhabitants being fled to Ruffia. From Kudzin, the fame diftance brought me on the 1 5th, to Krula, another little town, with a Ruffian garrifon. The country is partly cultivated, and partly deferted j bu t the remaining inhabitants will not be left here long; for I faw a Ruffian commandant, whofe bufinefs was, the taking an account of the people of feveral adjacent villages that had petitioned for lands in Rufsia. Thefe emi- grations are not at all furprifing: in time of peace, the Polilli nobles treat all the peafants as flaves in the utmofl extent of the word : when, therefore, a fcene of trouble andconfu- fion comes, they are fure to take the iirfl: op- portunity to defert, that they may efcape in future the renewal of their former mifery j and the condition of the new fettlers in Rufsia is fo infinitely fuperior to that of the peafants in Poland, that nothing can exceed the cager- RUSSIA. 1^9 nefs With which they all fly from the fcene of their flavery the moment their mafters are driven away. Thefe are the efFeds of that tyranny, which all the Polifh nobility exert upon their valTalsi fo that in cafe the Ruf- fians fhould reftore thefe numerous provinces, the Poles will return to deferts, inilead of well-peopled eftates. The 1 6th, I got to Obloka; the diftance forty-fix miles 5 flill in the province of Mif- lau. All this track is a fine rich country, but very poorly peopled, many villages being deferted. I pafTed a very large feat, belong- ing to a Polifh nobleman, in ruins. Whoever declares againfl the Ruflian party, are fure to have their eflates laid wafle, ^d many of their peafants carried oiF; and in the pro- vinces which lie near to the frontiers of that empire, they are driven away, and every thing feized by the enemy. There are not many finer countries, than great part of this province, but it is in a defolate flate. I have met with no parties of Poles, nor any appear- ance of war : the Emprefs has a quiet and cfFeclual polTeffion of much the greater part of Lithuania; and fuch parts are the only ones in the kingdom that enjoy any repofe. The 17th I reached Witepfki, the capital town of a large province, alfo in the hands of the 1^0 TtlAVELS THROUGii the Ruffians. The country is very wood/* In fifty miles, which were this day's journey* near thirty were through a continual foreft; the reft is tolerably well cultivated, and peo* pled; it is in poiTeffion of fome Poles, who fecuredthemfelves from the beginning by de- claring for the Ruffian caufe. They culti^ vate their own eftates by means of their vaf*- fals, who have fmall cottages, with little plots of ground round them, in which they raife what is neceffary for the fubfiftence of them- felves and their families in three days of the week, which are allowed them, and the reft of the time they work for theii' lord, under the direction of overfeers. One of thefe no- blemen cuhivates in this manner above fix ihoufand acres of land 5 his eftate contains about twenty thoufand acres, but much of it is marih and foreft. This is a reprefentation of all the eftates in Poland in time of peace. The owners of them, however fmall, are all Polifti gentlemen, and entirely equal ; but the numerous diftra6lions they have had from the beginning of their monarchy, have confo- lidated moft of the fmall properties, fo that at prefent the kingdom is generally divided into large eftates. Every owner cultivates his land by means of the peafants on it, who belong to him as much as the trees which grow R tJ S S I A. 192 grow on the foil ; thus the Poles are the greateft farmers in the worId,forfome of their princes pofTefs whole provinces, containing feveral hundred thoufand acres of land; and all their revenue, which is very conliderable, is raifed by this cultivation. The principle value of eftates is the vicinity to a navigable river; for without this advantage they have not a vent for the immenfe quantity of corn which they raife. The ilubbles I faw upon the eflate, juft now mentioned, were of all the common forts, and very exteniive, wheat, barley, oats, peafe, beans, buck-wheat. I faw a few tur- neps, but the quantity did not feem to be any thing proportioned to the extent of corn. In the night of the 17th the weather chan- ged, which had hitherto favoured me fo re- markably ; very heavy rains fell with fleet and fnow,. and continued fo bad the next day, that I ftaid at Witepfki that day and the two following ones, in expe6lation of a froft fet- ting in ; for they told me, I fhould find the roads much worfeand more liable to be dama- ged than thofe I had pafled. I ftaid till the 2ojh, a very fliarp froft having fet in for four and twenty hours. The 2ift I reached Goref- law, through fifty miles of foreft; the zzdl got to Sitefki, the diftance forty-three miles; the ground hard frozen and very good tra- velling. 192 TRAVELS THROUGH veiling, but the frofl continues and the wea- ther is (harp^ this line of country, like the laft, is foreft. The 23d, I reached Willifluki, which is in the boundary of Ruflia; but going from one country to the other makes no per- ceptible difference in the people, manners, or language; which is a circumftancc, that threatens the Poles not a little. I pafTed through another country of emigrants from that kingdom, who are feated on an eftate of the Emprefs's, which came to her not long iince by forfeiture ; it contains about four and twenty thoufand aci-es of land, and did not yield the late owner more than {Qven. hundred pounds a year; but the Czarina will prefently make it twice as many thoufands, for there is the fineft timber for mafls on it that is to be found in all the country ; and file is making a fmall ftream, that leads to the I wanna, navigable ; the expence will be but little, and file will carry her timber then to Peterfburg by water, which will prove a mofl important acquifition. The Polifh fet- tlement contains three hundred and forty farms, each a family ; they had exadtly the fame terms, as thofe I gave an account of be- fore. They are feated in a plain, thinly fcat- tered with trees, which they have cleared away : the foil, I was informed, for I could not 1. . R tJ' S S I A, rgrj fiot Ctt it, is very deep and rich : they hate each fifty, abres divided by the Emprefs; and they have made many interior diviiions. I was told that in Poland there are fcarcely any in- clofures-, but the Emprefs takes care, that all the newly cultivated tracks in her dominions fhall be inclofed, being informed, that they were the principal caufes, which havefo much advanced the hufbandry of England ; and it is remarkable, that the Poles fall very readily into it, and divide their fifty acres into feve- ral fields, as if they perfedily well underftood the importance of the Gondu61:. They culti- vate wheat, rye, oats, peafe, beans, and buck- wheat ; and have many crops of Swedifh turneps for the winter fupport of their cat- tle : tiiey get two quarters of wheat and rye from an acre, but fometimes lefs ; three of oats } and four of beans : and they reckon, that an acre of turneps will winter two cows* The cutting a canal for the conveyance of the timber to Peterfburg, will be of prodigi- ous advantage to this colony ^ for their pro- dudls will find thefame way to a moft advanta- geous market. All thefe people are perfe<^ly happy and contented; they are not deceived; on the contrary, they find their fituation to th^ full as good as they were made to exp£6t| sad ^OL.. III. O they 194. TRAVELS THROUGH they all fpeak of the Emprefs in the higheft terms of admiration and gratitude. This fyflem of peopling her dominions is certainly the greateft exertion of politicks that ihe could poflibly have fhewn : other princes have been w^illing to increafe the number of their fubjedts, by affording a refuge to emi- grants in their dominions, but nothing elfe; whereas the Emprefs is at a confiderable ex- pence in planting them in her's ; ihe fpares no coft to make the number as great as pof- fible ; although, from the cheapnefs of the country, it is done, comparatively fpeaking, at airnall expence, yet when fuch numbers, as ihe has thus received and fettled, are taken into the account, the fum of money, annually ex- pended in this truly noble way, will be found by no means fmall. The 24th, I reached Opolzko, the diftance above forty miles ; part of the country is forefl, and part of it a level plain, or ex- tended meadow, which did not feem to be marfhy. I paffed feveral villages, which feemed well peopled ; and much of the coun- try is tolerably cultivated. Opolzko is a for- tified tov\^n,and ftands in the middle of a fmall foreft, on a very pretty river ; it is not large, but well built, confidering it is in Ruflia, where fcarcely any thing is ever ufed but timber, of it ij s s I A. 155 of which there is great plenty all over the^eih- pire. The 25 th it fnowed inceflantly, and fo hard, that I was forced to flop till the 27th, before I could proceed on myjourney^ that is, till the fnow, which laid thick on the ground, was frozen; and then I was provided with fledges, which are a very eafy, expedi- tious, and agreeable way of travelling ; and pleafed me fo exceedingly, that I wifhed for a longer journey on the fnow than I now had to travel ; the cold was not fo penetrating as I exped:ed to find it. From Opolzko to Peterfburg is two hun- dred and feventy miles, which I travelled in four days with great eafe. And here ends this route through the weftern provin- ces of this great empire, which are the fineft and moft populous in it; for tho' I have been informed, that Siberia, and other immenfe ' regions to the eaft, confift of as fertile a foil as any in the world, and fome parts of them featedin as mild a climate, yet the near neigh- bourhood of the roving Tartars, in thefouth- ern and fineft tracks, renders them al moft con- tinued dsfarts : Ruflia, it is true, has con- quered many of them fo completely, that they are not only tributary, but alfo entirely un- able to exert themfelves againfl the empire, nationally fpeaking; but with individ.Tals the O 2 cafe S96 TRAVELS Through eafe is different, and thofe provinces could not be fettled without thefe Tartar neighbours being driven entirely away, or extirpated: fo that the weftern provinces, which are near to trade, and to the feat of government, are thofe of much the greateft importance : through thefe I have travelled above two thoufand miles, fo that I am able to form a pretty ac- curate general idea of the country. It appears, upon the whole, to be much better peopled than I expeded to find it. It is true, there are many forefts, in which you may travel a whole day without feeing any habitations^ and in other parts of the empire to a much greater extent; but we are not to Ibok in Ruffiafor the population of the moft -vveflern countries of Europe; if fuch was to be found, this empire, which is of a much greater extent than thatof the Romans, would be as powerful alfo > but the common ideas of this country, being all a defart, are carried too far : It is very badly peopled, taking the whole together j but many of the provinces, tiirough which I paifed, are very populous: the towns are confiderable, and the villages very thick ;. much of the territory in a good ftate of culture ; and the appearanceof it, in many pnrts, flourifliing : to this may be added the ii^reat increafeof people, conflantly gaining, by the RUSSIA. 1^^ thcteception and encouragement given to fo* reigners to fettle, who flock hither in whole troops : I fhall not aflert, that RufTia is a po- pulous, well cultivated country ; all I fay is> that there are more parts of it fd, than I ha4 reafon to cxped from the accounts I had re- ceived, and the books I had read : the latter indeed muft neceifarily be far from the prefent truth in moft particulars, from the changed that are conflantly making, and from the improvements of all kinds, which the prelent Emprefs fo nobly patronizes: and I may ven-*- ture to predi6t, that if ihe enjoys a long life, (he will change the face of the whole dominion j all the weflern provinces will be fully peopled : wherever the foil is fit for cultivation, the crown lands will be brought to yield a very great revenue, and general improvement fpread around. Upon my arrival at Peterlburglhiredmyold lodgings, which had been empty fince I left them : I was not determined what courfe totake, bufmefs wanted me much in England, for I had received letters from three tenants in Nor- thamptonfliire, complaining of my agent; and counter ones from my agent, complaining of my tenants j in which cafe, nothing is effect tual butalandlord'sprefencci on the contrary, the feafon was fo advanced, that it was im- pofTible tago by fea; and journeys, in the O 3 depth J98 TRAVELS THROUGH depth of winter, are to me extremely difagree- able, and the more fo, fmce habit had made me attentive to the ftate of all the countries I paffed through, and inquifitive in examining the agricultui'e of them, which is very badly performed in the midft of fnows : this made me think of fpending the winter at Peterfburg, and taking my way home in the fpring, either through Poland and Germany, or by the way of Turkey to the Adriatic, and fo to Italy; hut not reliftiing the idea of a winter, in latitude 60, I did not determine. In this fufpence 1 fpent a fortnight, which . time I pafTed very agreeably, by means of a more extended acquaintance than I had made before ; and I was particularly happy in Mr. Mafon's arrival at Peterfburg, who had tra- velled quite acrofs Poland from Vienna ; he defigned to take advantage of the fnow, to travel through Siberia, adefign I much dif- fuaded him from : however, he determined on refting.himfelf a.month at Peterfburg; and jny being fo fortunate as to have much of this trentleman's company at my quarters, made the time and the feafon pafs away very agree- ably: we converfed together upon the mutual fubjedl of our travels, which proved to me a fund of inexhauftible pleafure ; for Mr. Ma- fon, bcftdes crofling Poland, had been all over Germany ; :: ,0 : R u s s I A. 199 Germany 5 through part of Hungary ; over Italy, France and Spain. He had been long upon this tour, and has con traded fuch a habit of moving about, that I believe he will not fettle again, till he has travelled all the world over. Lafl: winter he fpent on the coaft of Africa, and he has determined, for the fake of feeing the furprizing change, to pafs this, in the ice and fnows of the north. This, it muil be confefTed, is feeing and becoming ac- quainted with human nature in every form, and with all the cuftoms of the world; and to a perfon, who has an inclination for fuch a way of life, which is ftrong in my friend Mr. Mafon, it is, purfujng the inclination eifec- tually, A perfon who lives genteely at Peters- burg, efpecially if he be a foreigner, is furc to get eafily into the beft company in the court; I had not been fix weeks fettled in my winter habitation before I had more com- pany than I cared forj but it was not difficult to feledt from amopg them fome whofe con- verfation was equally agreeable and inflruc- tjve. And I never fpent my time in a manner, that was more to my inclination, than in the company of Mr. Mafon, M. de Reverfholt, a general officer in the Ruffian fervice, a native of Saxony; the baron Minchewfe, a Ruffian O 4 noblesnan. ?0Q TRAVELS THROUGH nobleman, and the Count de Selliern, a no- bleman fettled in Ruflia, but of Polifh extrac- tion. Thefe men areperfe6lly well acquainted with the languages, courts, and armies of the prijicipii nations in Europe. They have all tfgvelledi- are learned, polite, and of moft liberal ideas. For two months we took it by turns to have a dinner and fupper provided at ©ur quarters, where all the reft affembled, andfpent thebeftpaftof the day and evening: the circle was fometimes enlarged, by fomc of U5. bringing a friend, which was chiefly three noblemen fettled atPeterfburg,who in- troduced feveral Ruffian and other foreign officers, who had fe^n muck fervice, and were polite and underflanding perfons. ' In this company I had the fatisfad:ion of having much converfation upon feveral fubjcfls of confequence, in which I was defirous of gain- ing further intelligence; particularly, con- cerning the ftate of the diftant provinces of the empire, the views of the court upon the Black fea, and the prefent condition of the Turkifh forces. M. de Reverfholt, who had been in the laft campaign againft the Ottomans, gave me the following particulars of the Turks, which I think may be agreeable to the rea- der:—'He obferved, " that if ever the Ruffian empire RUSSIA. 201 empire engaged in a war with a certainty of fuccefs, it is in the prefent ; for the Turkifb army is perfedly enervated with peace 3 ten quiet years doing more mifchief to it in this refpefl,' than forty to any other army in Eu- rope: 'the JanifTaries have the abfolute com- mand of the empire ; and their luxury and riot, in a time of peace, is fuch, being almoft without difcipline, th at they reduce themfelves to a level with theworfl forces ih the Turkifh army^ That, befides this evil, another of a yet worfe tendency is, the equality of the Grand Seignor's revenue: money in Turkey is of the fame cheapnefs as in all other coun- tries of Europe, but the taxes of the empire continue always the fame; fo that theTurkifh" monarch, although he has now the fame re- venue as his predeceflbrs, Itill is be) ond com- parifon a much poorer prince. Many authors have given ftrange accounts about theTurkifh policy in fqueezing the bafhas, and by that means railing a regular revenue ; but he ob^ ferved, that it is a great miftake to think this any equivalent for the decline in the value of money; that now and then the Grand Seignor fleeces a bafha, and gets a confiderable fum, but in no refpe6l to be named with any regu-^ lar revenue ; that the forfeiture of eftates in Chriflian countries might almoft as well be kt 2C2 TRAVELS THROUGH fet down for a revenue, as this of the Turks. He remarked, that the efFe6ls, which were within the power of curious perfons to become informed of, (hewed, that the revenue of the Turkifh empire was fmaller than in former times: oneftrong inftancewas, the number of their troops being lefs, and this, by fo confi- derable a number, as fixty thoufand men. It i$ alTerted, as a fa ^cre of good flax is worth from three to five pounds; but they raife much that does not yield three. Marienburg is a fmall town, tolerably well built, and mofl romantically fituatcd on a promontory of land which pro- jeiSls into a large lake; fo that it is joined to ■ the main land only by a narrow neck, not • • ■ much RUSSIA. 227 itiuch wider than the road. An inland place in a country not full of manufadures, caa fcarcely be of any great importance. Marien- burg was once of confequence for its ftrength, and the fcene of feveral military expeditions, when belonging to the Teutonic knights. It is at prefent poor, but ftrong for this part of the world. The people live cheaply, frorn the fertility of the neighbouring country, and the vaft quantity of lifh which they get tut of the lake. The farmers manure their land around the lake with a kind of ouze, which they dig up on the banks of it : it is of a deep blue colour, about two feet deep, cuts like wet peat, and is compofed of rotten vege- tables ', for there is an immenfe growth of weeds every year in the lake, which drive afhore and rot, and, with a mixture of mud, forms this manure, which is of the nature of marie, and fertilizes their fields for many years. 1 have no doubt but thp*1^me mate- rials might be found on the coafts of many other lakes j but cuftom not having made the ufe of them common, the hufbandmen neg- le6t them. The 1 1 th I got to Pebalgen, another town built on a lake^ the diftance about forty miles, through a territory, part good, and part of it marihy -, but all the lands that would admit 0^2 of ^28 TRAVELS THROUGH of culture feemed to be under cultivation, and yielded wheat, rye, barley, oats, and pulfe. They alfo cultivate cabbages for the winter food of their herds, which are very numerous. It is a large red cabbage, which ilands the li-tmofl feverity of the winter, and is taken from under the fnow in full perfe after which they leave them till they fow barley or plantcabbages, fpreading themonthe land before the laft ploughing. This mull all be a very excellent fyftem of hi^fbandry. The 1 3th in the afternoon I reached Riga, . which is the moft confiderable place of trade liext to Peterfburgb in the RuHian dominions. It (lands very advantageoufly for commerce, near the mouth of the river Dwina, which with its branches, extending a great way into Poland RUSSIA. 231 Poland and Ruflia, bring immenfe quanti- ,ties of commodities which are exported froni this city : Among thefe the principal are •hemp, flax, timber for mafts and other pur- ^ofes; pitch, tar, and pot afhes; allthefecom- modities are produced in the provinces or near them, through which thofe rivers run; and fome of them by means of fhort land carriage from one river to another, much farther, even from the Ukraine and the Polilh pro- -vinces that border upon Turkey. It appears by the regiiler of the cuftom-houfe at this town, that more than five hundred fail of ihips, from one hundred and fifty to four Jhundred tons,have been loadedhereinayear; three hundred of which were Dutch, and one ^hundred and fixty Englifh ; but of late the trade of the town has declined, for at .prefent there are not many more than four Jaundredfail cleared outwards, of which about two hundred and forty are Englifh. Every ;ton of ,the goods they carry from hence might be had at our own plantations; but for want of due encouragement we come to Ruf- fiafor them, and pay fome hundred thoufand pounds balance on the account; which is an inflance of miflaken politicks that never was to be equalled in the annals of the Dutch re- publick. 0^4 I had 232 TRAVELS THROUGH I had a letter of recommendation to Mr, Scueen, a principal merchant in this town, with whom I fpent the evening j and he not only gave me the heads of the preceding par^ ticulars, but I had alfo fome inftrudive conr verfation with him on the prefent ftate of the province of Livonia. Of all Peter the Great's conquefts, this was the moft important; be* ing a country, which for its produ6ls, ports, and iituation is of the higheft importance to Ruffia. It forms upon an average a fquare of 200 miles every way, and contains bet- ter than twenty-five millions of acres, and near a million of people. Above half the lands, he calculates, are underprofitable cultivation, either in arable crops or good meadow -, and exclufive of woods, marfhes, lakes and rivers. The annual produdtis about thirteen millions flerling, including timber. Such an eflimate cannot be accurate, I do not give it the rea- der as a paper of authority; it is nothing more than the calculation of a very ingenious fenfible man, who has many times travelled all over Livonia. The parts which I faw are not equal in culture to others in the province, yet I ihould apprehend, that half the track I came through is under culture, meadows in- cludjcdi and as to the number of acres, it is a geographical fa6l. But I fliould not con- ceive R -U S S 1 A.' 233 (C€iv€ there were quite a million of people in Jt 5 I heard the number once eftimatcd at be- tween fix an4 feven hunqlred thoufand. Sup-r pofi ng ten or twelve millions of acres culti- vated, which does not appear to me an ex- aggerated idea, I do not fee how the total produ6l of the province c^n be eftimated fo low as thirteen millions. But from this iketch of particulars it is eafy to conceive^ that the importance of the pfoyinice to Rufr- iia is very great. Travels Travels throug-h Poland and Pruffia. POLAND AND PRUSSIA, 237 C H A P. VII. yourney to Dantzick—JDefcrlption of the coun- try and hujbandry — 'Trade of Dantzick — Journey to Warfaw — Mifer able fate of Po- land — To Brefaw, THE 14th I left Livonia, and reached Mittaw, the capital of Courland, the diftance about eight and forty miles. The face of the country is exadtly the fame as that of Livonia, and the foil equally fruitful, which by information I found was the cafe of the whole duchy: their produces, as hemp, flax, lintfeed, timber, mails, pot afh, fkins, tar, honey, wax, &c. are conliderable. The whole country is full of black cattle, and they have many horfes. In the happy times of the Dukes of Courland, when the Ketler family had quiet poffeilion, and before the duchy and all its town were ravaged by the Swedes and Mufcovites, Mittaw was a confiderable and a fine town ; it reckoned fifteen thou- fand inhabitants, but now they are not more than nine thoufand. It is yet an agreeable place, well built, with a handfome ducal palace, where is fomething of a court with guards. 4^8* TRAVELS THROUGH guards, and there is always a ftrong garrifon in it. Of late years there have been great additions to the fortifications. It is now, as well as the whole duchy, in the hands of the Ruffians. From Mittaw I reached Zagari in Poland on the 15th, being about four and forty miles; part of the country tolerably cultiva- ted, but not equal to Livdniia, or even toCour- land ', there were fome Ruffian foldiers at Zagari, to keep the town and the neighbour- ing country in order, which they do very ef- fe6lually; and a great advantage it is to thefe parts of Poland, where the civil war is thus kept under by a foreign power. The ad- vantages of all the cultivation I faw are in the hands of the Ruffians, for the Polrih nobles through moft of the great province of Samo- gitia are driven from their eftates, and the profits of fuch of them as are not de- populated all goto the Ruffians. The cot- tages of the peafants are as mean as can well he conceived ; they are chiefly built of turf, and covered with the fame, being drawn up •in a fpiral form to a point, where is an aper- ture for the fmoak to go out; the room is large enough for the family and the cattle ; all lye together and in the fame manner. I had read that they ufed in this province none but POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 239 6at^ Wooden plough- (hares, through a ridi- culous notion that the iron damaged their crops ; but this is not true, for I faw many ploughs at work for barley, and all of them had iron (hares, but of a moll aukward con- llru6tion. - The 1 6th I got to Rofenne, the diftance near fixty miles ; through a country that had hardly any appearance of prefent cultivation ; many villages I pafled were deferted, feve- ral manfions in ruins, and fields entirely wafte that had once been tilled ; the whole a very melancholy fpedlacle ; but much of the country was partly marfh and forefl. The town of Rofenne is a fmall fortified place, which has a RufTian garrifon ; there is an ap- pearance of nothing but poverty in it. The 17th I got to Swingy, a little town about thirty four miles from Rofenne; there is fome land in this line of country under cultivation, being the eftate of a nobleman, who enjoys it in tolerable peace under the proteflion of Ruf fia. They fow barley, oats, peafe, beans, and a little rye; I faw feveral ploughs at vi^ork ; and upon examining them, found that the fhares were wood, to my no fmall furprize ; I enquired the reafon of this, and they could give me none, only that they never ufed any other fort; the land here is fandy, and did not feem 24© TRAVELS THROUGH feem to yield good crops ^ the rye was full of weeds : I aflced if it was to be weeded, and they told me they never weeded any corn at all. The nobleman is an old man, who has his eftate managed in the fame way as his fa- ther had ; that is, the peafants are miferably opprefTed by his ftewards, and his own in- come at the fame time contemptible. The 1 8 th I travelled forty miles toStocken, all in Pruffia, the country fandy, and not much of it well cultivated, but the peafants are much more at their eafe than in Poland; and this country being fubjed: to the king of Pruffia, no Ruffians, no Polish confederacies, nor any diflurbanccs happen in it, which is a very great advantage to agriculture -, though I yet have feen nothing that gives me any great idea of their knowledge in that fcience. This country is much more populous than Samo* gitia, and the houfes of the peafants built of much better materials. I paffed two or three villages, entirely inhabited by Poles who have fled their country, and fettled here by order of the king of Pruffia, though without any of that noble encouragement I faw exerted in Iluffia J and I believe thofe who take refuge in the latter country, are in other refpedls better treated than they were in Pruffia. The 19th I got by dinner to Koninglhurg, the dif- tance ^'OLAND AND PRUSSIA. 241 ftance, being only twenty miles through a country pretty well cultivated, and tolerably peopled, though the foil is in general fandy, and from its appearance I fhould not apprehend it very good. All the country people were how bufy in preparing their land for fpring-fown corn; they plough here with only two cattle in a plough; and I faw fome drawn by a little horfe and cow, or a little ox ; this is very pra6licablewith fo light a foil: they fow large quantities of buck- wheat, and reckon it more profitable than barley. Koningfburg is the moft confiderable town which the King has in Pruflia; it is tolerably well fituated, and has a very good harbour with fome trade, but not near equal to that of Riga, though it is a hanfe town. The export is in the fame ar- ticles, except hemp and flax, of which the quantity is too inconfiderable to mention. Upon the coafl are found fometimes large quantities of yellow amber, which is to be bought at Koningfburg. The ftreets are broad, but irregular and not well paved ; but there are many very good buildings in it, and they reckon above twenty thoufand inhabitants. The King has made feveral attempts to in- ereafe its trade, but they do not feem to be attended with any great efFe(5l. Dantzick on one fide, and Riga on the other, are two fuch Vol hi, R rivals. 242 TRAVELS THROUGH rivals, that this place cannot make its trade good againft them for any thing further than the mere amount of the produ6ls of that track of country, which lies nearer to it than to any other. The 2oth I reached "Landfperg, at about forty miles from Koningfburg : the country all fandy, and, that circumftance -confidered, pretty well inhabited. Buck-wheat is a great crop with them, I found. They do not fow it till the end of May: the produce is greater than that of any other grain or pulfe, and the ftraw they reckon nearly equal to hay for cattle 5 an obfervation I had not any where heard of before. Thepeafants of this country, I find, are all much freer than in Poland, but tTiey pay very heavy taxes to the- King ; yet th'dy are not in fuch bad circumflances as the Polifh peafants, becaufe taxation is regular; whereas the payments made by the peafants to their lords inPolandare (o capricious, that they never know when they have paid their total imoft of it being in cattle, and irregular perfonalfcrvices; the beft liberty that can be given to peafants, is to compound all fuch for money, which makes their burthens regular, however heavy they may be ; and when this Xy'ftem is extended as far as it will go, it in- cludes the tenures of land 5 fo that all the cflates POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 243 reflates are lett on leafe, and the landlord'^ whole propertypays him a regular intereft in money : this is the highefl advantage that can any where be made of the foil -, it will •in this cafe always be beft cultivated, and yield a greater total prpduft than in any other iyftem, at the fame, time that many more people are maintained than in any other way. It is not at all neceffary that a country ihould be free, in order for this fyflem to reign; it is .as general throughout France, and the arbi- trary governments in Italy, as it is in England . The people, it is true, may be oppreffed; but then the opprelllon is different : in France, the proportion of taxes paid by the farmers and peafants is quite out of all proportion to ;the other clalfes of the people ; but then there is a regularity in their burthens, which renders them bearable. Taxes upon land, cattle, crops, or on whatever they may be laid, muft in their nature have fomething of regu- larity and proportion in them -, but the per- fonal fervice, in which the lower ranks of Poland are kept, is a mere flavery, fuch a defpotifm as the planters in the Weil-Indies ufe over their African flaves. Compart with this, the opprejTed {late of the Ruffian peafants is an abfolute freedom; belides R ;s which. 244 TRAVELS THROUGH which, there are many farmers who hire their lands by tenures. The 2 1 ft carried me about forty miles to Elbing j the country all fandy, yet tolerably well cultivated. It is remarkable that buck- wheat, upon thefe fands, very often yields as profitable a produce as wheat on the beft •foils : they get five or fix quarters an acre off it, and the flraw they reckon excellent food for their cattle in winter. Swedifh turneps they alfo raife to advantage upon them ; and tillage is fo eafy, from the lightnefs of the draught, that they plough their land, after the firft time, with a fmgle horfe or cow : but this ploughing with cows is only while they are dry, they do not ufe them while they give milk. Elbing is, next to Dantzick, the mofl confiderable town in Polifh Pruflia : it is a pretty, neat, and well-built place, with a trade that is fufficient to give a brifk circula- ■tion of money among the inhabitants : they load many fliips in a year, fometimes above thirty fail, with corn, timber, potatoes, and hides. It is always itriking, in every little town, to fee the fuperiority that refults from trade : a fmall commerce gives a circulation and a wealth, that ditfufes happincfs through : every clafs of the people -, the houfes are bet- ter built, new ones-^are. ereded, and every body POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 245 body lives well. But in a country town, fupported by nothing but the agriculture around it, every thing is the contrary ; the houfes are poorly built, many are fallen into ruin, and all ranks of the people are poor and unhappy. Such are the confequences of bringing commerce into a country, w^hich never fails of giving a new appearance to ^very obje6l. The 2 2d I arrived at the famous city of Dantzick; thediftance about forty miles. I crofTed feveral branches of the Viftula, part of the couutry being within the liberties of the city. This territory, though a poor fandy foil, is moil highly cultivated, and fliews, in every acre, the infinite advantages which refult from liberty and wealth. The burghers have their villas in this territory; and all of them have farms, which they manage in a manner much fuperior to the hufbandry that is to be feen any where elfe in Poland. I faw fome very fine fields of wheat on this appa- rently barren fand, which, I dare fay, the moft fertile land in Poland does not exceed : this was owing to manure brought from Dantzick, fuch as dung of all forts, aihes, the fvveepings of the fireets, the offals of the Ihops, &c. \vhich being carried out of the city unto heaps, is fold into the country by the public R 3 fcavengersi 246 TRAVELS THROUGH fcavengers; moft of it is bought by the bantzickers for their farms ; and they raife by this means as fine corn, &c. on their poor fand, as the richeit foils yield that are not equally manured. Dantzick is a very confiderable city, well fituated on the mouth of the Viftula, with a very advantageous harbour for all but the largeft fliips. It very much refembles Ham- burgh, both in the loftinefs of the houfes, the manner of building them, and in the nar- rownefs of the ftreets. The ftreets and houfes are much cleaner than any others in this part of the world; but neatnefs is not carried to the length it is in Holland. The principal ftreets are planted on each fide in the Dutch way, which is an inftance of ill tafte in the original, which one cannot but be furprifed at ever feeing copied. The city is not large, the circumference not exceeding three miles : it is fortified with a wall and a double ditch; but the flrength alone that is its fecurity, is the intereft of all their neighbours that the place fhould continue free : in which circum- flance it is in the fame predicament'as Ham- burgh. Two thoufand regular troops, excel- lently provided and armed, would be a very weak garrifon; but they have not feven hun- dred to fpare, and thofe neither in difcipline, arms. "POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 247 ^rms, or magazines, comparable to the fame number of men in any regular fervice in Eu- rope. In a word, Dantzick has a ftrength to refift nobody but the Poles. They have an arfenai full of ufelefs arms, and talk of pof- fefling two or thr^ hundred pieces of cannon ; but a great train of artillery may be as inlig- nificant, as thefe are of Dantzick, as a maga* zine of match locks. But the commerce of this city is the objedl that is alone worth attention ; it poOeffing, tliey reckon, fixteen out of twenty parts of all the trade of Poland. This is by means of the river Viilula, and its numerous branches^ which fpread through a vafl extent of that kingdom, and are navigable almoft wherever they go. The great article of export is corn, and particularly wheat ; they fend off fome years to the amount of five, fix, and {evtn hundred thoufand pounds; and once the amount arofe to one million two hundred and forty thoufand pounds. Gf late years the quantity is much declined, and, lince the prefent troubles in Poland, has been very trifling; fo that the total^ lafl year, itv/as faid, did not amount to one hundred thoufand pounds. AH the corn comes in floops and flat- bottomed barges, that carry from thirty to lixty tons, and fome more, and wholly on R 4 account 24S TRAVELS THROUGH account of the landlord?, who are all nobles by virtue of their pofi'elTing lands. It is raifed on their eftates by their peafants, who, as I before obferved, are all flaves ; fo that the Poles maybe faid to farm their whole eftates, what- ever be the extent: the barges are their own generally, and the watermen that navigate them are fome of them their vaflals, and others freemen, whom they hire in the cities and towns on the river. It is fold to merchants at Dantzick, who lodge it in their granaries, which are more capacious than thofe of any town in Europe, fome of them eight ftories high. The boats bring, befides corn, all the other articles of fale which the Polifh eftates produce, particularly pot-a£h, mafts, plank for fhip-building, pipe flaves, which are bet- ter than thofe of Hamburgh, bees-wax in large quantities, fome hemp and flax, and for- merly much of it manufadured into facking, packing cloths, and even linen ; but this of late years is much declined : of all thefe ar- ticles, to the amount of three or fourhundre4 thoufand pounds, but fometimes not near fo much. Tbe boats, on their return, carry back to the nobles, cities, and towns, all the commodities and manufadlures which they want. Among thefe are reckoned, iron fi'om Sweden, of which they once took two thour fand POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 249 fand tons a year, but the import is fallen to athoufandi Eaft India goods of allforts, ma- fadures of woollen and fine linens, filks, brandy, wines, &c. The Dutch have all the fupply of India goods, and moft of that of linen and woollen ; and the French the prin- cipal part of the filks, brandy, wines, and all the Weft India commodities. As to England, her trade with Dantzick is very inconfjderable, which is entirely owing to our taking off very few of her commodities ; we never pay money for what plank, pot- a(h, or hemp we import -, and when wheat is fo dear in England, that foreign corn is admitted, our merchants have fometimes fent many fhips thither to load with wheat, and have paid for their cargoes with our manu- factures, of which none are fo acceptable m Poland as the hardware goods of Birming- ham, Sheffield, Rotherham, &c. Making ufe of a letter of recommendation, which I had brought from the Count Selliern, to Mr. Pratfky, a very eminent merchant at Dantzick, and one whofe great wealth fliews Jiow well he underftands the trade of the city, gave me an opportunity not only of getting the preceding particulars upon better authority than I could otherwife have done, but, at the fame time, enabledme to make fome enquiries CpncerningtheprefentflateofPoland.refpeft- inff 250 TRAVELS' THROUGH ing the fa6lious views and defigns of the fe- veral parties which at prefent hariafs that kingdom. I had for three years paft read much concerning them in the public prints of many countries, but could never clearly underftand the real fiate of the kingdom till I travelled from the Ukraine to Peterfburg. The ac- count he gave me was this : " Poland is divided into two grand parties, the Roman Catholicks, and the Protectants and Greeks. The former, for fome ages paft, have omitted (as has been the cafe in every country of Europe) no opportunities of op- prefling the latter, and depriving them of that religious liberty to which they have a right by the conftitution of the kingdom. Thefe opprefiions and invafions of privileges begot confederacies of nobles, profeffing the Reformed or Greek religions, who entered into compacts for the defence of their faith, and declaring a full refufal to acknowledge any fovereignty, until their complaints were redrelTed, This ftroke was copied immedi- ately in moft parts of the kingdom where thofe religious are found. This gave rife to counter confederacies of the Roman Catho- llck nobles, with this addition, that they, in their agreement, declared all who did not accede to it to be enemies to the kingdom. A J POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 251 A civil war immediately commenced : RuiTiaa troops, which had long been in the kingdom, were greatly inereafed, upon the Emprefs's declaring, in a general manifefto, her protec- tion of the Greek and Reformed religion ; and all parts of the kingdom were immedi- ately in arms. In this war, the King, who difliked the whole of thefe proceedings, has been neuter ; though it is very well known that the Ruffians are his friends, and that tkeiir power preferves him on the- throne. "Tht fuccefs of the war was at firft various ; but everywhere the effect of it was deftroy- ing and plundering each other's eftates, and utterly ruining aconfiderablepart of the king- dom. In the plunder taken on either fide, the peafants are always the moft valuable part: fuch as are not armed by their mafters, but remain at home to cultivate the land, are, upon a fkirmiih or incurfion which proves fuccefsful, carrie-d oiF, and planted upon the victors lands, where they are moil feverely treated, if they do not immediately conform to the religion of their new mafters. Such a fyftem of making war, which has now ra^ vaged Poland three years with great violence., , it may eafily be fuppofed, is well enough cal- culated for reducing the whole kingdom to the condition of a dcfart. The Ruffians have in general 252 TRAVELS THROUGHT general been too hard for their enemies, and have cut in pieces a great number of their confederacies as faft as they are formed ; upon which occafion the counter-reformed Poles enter and utterly deftroy their eftates, carry- ing off the peafants, and fixing them upon their own lands ; and many are fent into Ruffia from almoft every expedition, which, of all the reft, are thofe only who have any chance of being fixed out of the reach of conftant re- volutions. This is the prefent fiate of the kingdom : more than half of it has been laid wafte fince the war began ; and what threat- ens the whole is, the number of Roman Ca- tholic confederacies, which are formed as faft as the Ruffians deftroy the old ones. Nothing canbringany degree of peace to the kingdom, but the Emprefs increafing her troops to fuch a number, as to make a conqueft of all the Roman Catholic part of the kingdom : and this would give umbrage, it is thought, to other powers, although fome of them have declared in favour of the Reformed Greek caufe 5 that is, in favour of liberty of con- fcience. While the prefent war lafls between Ruflia and Turkey, the Emprefs cannot fpare either troops or money for fuch a plan ; but if a peace is concluded with the Porte, we POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 253 we may then look for more decifive mea- fures." Upon my afking him his fentiments of the Ruffian acqiiilitions, and their keeping poflef- iion of fo many provinces, driving away the Polifh nobiUty from their eftates, and carry- ing moft of the peafants into Ruflla ; inti- mating that I thought the Emprefs had a fair chance of acquiring fomething impor- tant j he rephed, " I do not apprehend that the Emprefs of Ruffia will think of feizing any Pohlh provinces, becaufe that would make not only all moderate perfons, and all well-wifhers to their country among the Poles, her implacable enemies, but would deprive her of the ftrongefl pretence fhe has of interfering, and thereby governing Po- land : at the fame time, it would bring her into a war with Pruffia and Auftria, for nei- ther of thofe powers would fee fuch Ruffian acquilitions, and fit by quietly. The aims of that Princefs, which I have little doubt are thofe of a true politician, are to fupport the party of her own religion, and prevent their being oppreiTed, and to gain fuch a general power in the kingdom, as to have her will be treated, in all great national meafures, with due refpe6t. Her carrying av/ay the Polifh peafants to people her crown lands, is mofc certainly 854 ^kAVUtS TEIROI^OH certainly a veiy political condud; ; for fhe will add thereby equally to her flrength and wealth." M. Pratiky inlifted on my taking a dinner with him, which I did. He has a large and convenient houfe, well furnifhed, and-miack in the Englifli manner. His wife is an agree-^ able, fen fible woman, a native of Silefia, who talked politicks inceiTantly, and was a flrenvious advocate for the King of Pruilia. They hada beautiful younglady, their daugh- ter, v*^ho entertained me on the harpficliord, Dahfzick being pretty well fupplid with niuficians from Germany. M. Pratfky lives elegantly,but in the German manner, which is all the tafte there : they fit long at their meals, and drink very heartily: and among all the nations that are fond of the pleafures of the lable, there is always much fociety, and a •defire of pleafuig, which does inftead of the more refined manners of the fouthern coun- tries. Mifs Pratfky, and other ladies I law, aim in their drefs, I obferved, at an imitation of the French tafte, but I cannot fay I could ever admire any imitations, even in drcfs : whatever nation affeds to follow the taftcof another, will never make any other figure than that of an halting copyer, who Ihcvvs as nUich aukwardnefs as falhion. The Engli(h never POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 25- never makefuch fools of themfelves, as when they copy the French in their drefs ; the two nations are of different genius, and different manners ; we never come up to the extrava- gance of the original -, our copy is always tame : go from London to Paris, you are in a new world; you find what was called French to be a miferable defe6live copy of a mifera- ble original. During my ftay at Dantzick I was at the Golden Crown, a very good inn, lately fitted up and kept by a Dutchman; he charges very reafonably, and fupplied me with good fifli very frefii, and his wines are excellent, par- ticularly old hock. The 26th I left Dantzick and took the road for Warfaw, in the province of Plofcow. I was informed, there were feveral parties of confederates, and much fkirm idling, I there- fore took the advantage of travelling with a Dantzick burgomafler, going on public bu- finefs to the King, with a company of foldicrs for his guard. That day we travelled above forty miles to Kirchow, afmall town through a fandy track of country, but with many vil- lages in it. The next day we got to Culm, once a famous place and a ha'nfe-town, but it has long been in decay, and is now, though adarge place, filled with nothing but beggars and 2:56 TRAVELS THROUGH and ruins. The fituation is upon a hill, and would, if the town was well built, be very plea- lant. From hence we pafled the 28 th through Thorn to Wladiflaw ; the former of thefe towns was a hanfe, and a noted place for trade before that of Dantzick, but moft of its commerce and inhabitants are gone ; it has fcill, however, a good appearance, the ftreets are broad, flrait, and fome of them well paved, and the houfes large and handfome : here is yet fome trade by means of the Viftula, which is what keeps the place from the ruin into which fo many others have fallen. The country we palled is not fandy, but feems to be a good loam, and the appearance of the corn indi- cates good hufbandry, but many eftates are quite defolate : we went through three vil- lages that had been reduced to aflies more than a year ago, and no figns yet of being re- built. Wladiflaw is a pretty well built town alfo on the Vifliula ; the only buildings in it that are of any note is the Cathedral, it being the fee of a bifliop, an old Gothic edifice ; and the bifliop's palace, which has been much damaged by a fiege the town flood. The 29th we went ^o miles to Plockfkow, on the banks of the river, except where marflnes prevent; the furrounding country is a very rich foil, and not having fuffered from an 1>0LAND and PRUSSIA. 257 .'an enemy, fhewed many figns of good culti- 'vation: great champain tracks of open coun- try are covered with wheat, which looked very Well : the ploughs were bufy in preparing for barley ; no oats are cultivated here. The land feemed very well tilled by a couple of •little horfes and two oxen ; but the ploughs are of a mofl: aukward conflrudion, and the peafants know not how to turn a ftraight fur- row; they go as crooked as can well be ima- gined, which is difagreeable to look at, tho% I apprehend, not the worfe for the corn. They fow a good deal of hemp and flax in this neighbourhood, which they are very well ii- tuated for fending, with their corn, to Dant- zick. Wheat produces two quarters an acre ; barley three, and peaie two and an half. An acre of hemp, or of flax, is worth about fifty fhillings. They have large herds of cattle, which they feed in fummer upon the marfties on the Viftula; and in winter upon cabbages and turneps, which they always boil in the German manner before they give them to the cattle : this is not of much confequence where wood is fo plentiful; but in England would do only in the neighbourhood of coal mines. But it is highly Worthy of trial, to fee how it would anfwer to follow this cuflom; becaufe, if one acre boiled goes as far as three Vol. IIL S ^r 258 TRAVELS THROUGH or four raw, which I have heard it does, there are many fituations in which it would be very advifeable. We pafled near a nobleman's man- sion, furrounded by a double moat full of water, and fome cannon mounted on the bat- tlements : my fellow-traveller told me, that this caftle had been often befieged by the op- pofite party; but the nobleman driving all his peafants and cattle immediately in, had yet been fuccefsful in repelling them, which feems to be the only fyftem of life in Poland for any perfon to have the leall: fecurity; but ©f late he has had the fortune to efcape any ravages, and is remarkable for the induftry and attention with which he cultivates his cflate, and takes a moft fatherly care of all the peafants on it. This is a very rare inftanqe in Poland ; for they are generally ufed, as I have often obferved, in a moil oppreflive manner; ■fe^t the good effe<51: of this contrary treatment is ex^tremely vifible in the cafe of this noble- man, who, with only a fmall eftate, com- pared with many in the kingdom, has by ineans of a regular and confident condud to- wards his vaflals, and by a conftant attention to the culture of his land, been able to lave much money; part of which he has laid out in fortifying his caftle, which has more than once preferved his property and his pcafiints, and ^QLAND AND PRUSSIA. 259 and the reil is lodged in the bank of Dant- zlck. The 30th we reached Zadrzin, which is a flage of more than forty miles, through a very fine rich country, part of which is fully cultivated. They fbw very large quantities of wheat and barley, but no rye, or oats, peafe gr beans; they fallow their lands for wheat, and alfo lay all their dung in for it, and af- terwards take two fucceflive crops of barley; ploughing thrice for each. Wheat yields four quarters an acre, and bailey three. They alio fbw ibme hemp and flax, and get as fine crQ{)S as any in Poland. The country is di- vided into four eftate^, and has efcaped being plundered, which is owing, I fuppofe, to the vicinity of the capital, where there has gene- rally been a pretty ftrong garriibn. All this country on the Viftula, and between Dant- zick and Warfaw, is the beft fituated of any in Poland; for the voyage to the former city is ihort, and there are many populous and con- fiderable towns, particularly Warfaw, which take off large quantities of the products at a good market, which is an advantage of the moft valuable kind. From Zadrzin is only forty miles to War- faw, the road running all the way within fight of the Viftula; in fome places there are Ikirt- S % ing 26o TRAVELS THROUGH 2iig marflies, but m others all through an arable country. This we travelled the ift of May, arriving at that city in the afternoon. It is the feat of government, the capital of the kingdom, and the refidence of the King; yet there is nothing ftriking in it. ' The ftreets are many of them crooked and ill paved, the buildings have little of elegance in them, tho* k>me of them are new ones ; there are a few which make a tolerable fhew *, thefe are houfes belonging to the Polifh nobles, who make Warfaw their winter refidence. The royal palace is a noble edifice, being, beyond com- parifon, the fineft building in Poland. The apartments are very fpacious, and fome of them new fitted up and furnifhed in the Eng- lifh manner, being executed by the London artifts, brought from thence at the king's ex- pence. The room they call the Hall of Vic- tory, from formerly having been a hall, is converted into a faloon hung with tapeftry fromBrufiels; the ceiling, pannels,door-cale&, and window frames all neatly executed in white carving, gilt: the rooms are very nu- merous-, and all the offices for a court ex- tremely convenient. And here let me ob- •terve, that notwithflandiiig the prelent trou- bles which diftradl the kingdom, yet tlierc ■LS a magnificence and a brilliancy dii- played around the King of Poland, which fuits POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 261 fuits very ill with the ftate of his mind, than which, by all accounts, nothing can be more unhappy. His Majefly is certainly a man of quick parts, and has a truly patriotic con- cern for the miferies of his kingdom, which he is utterly unable to prevent : the ftate, in which he lives is the regular court, which the republick maintains for all its kings ; and it is fo much a piece of republican magnifi- cence, that the King has not ail the offices in it in his own power. The court days do not exhibit any great circle of Polifh lords; the moft confiderable in the kingdom are not only in oppofition to the crown, but even in open arms againft it : but the officers who are obliged to attend the nobles of the King's party, foreign minifters, and Ruffian officers, all together fill the room pretty well. There is a Polifh regiment of guards, of a thouiand inen,difcipUned in the Pruffian manner, ralfed by the prefent King, and he often reviews, them ; the officers as well as private men are Poles, but none of them nobles ; they are collected from all the other clafTes, and de- pend abfolutely on the will of the King: this is a meafure which was brought about by de- grees, and with great art; it has been of un- common confequence to the King, for by means of this body of troops he has been able S 3 to 262 TRAVELS THkOUGH to move into feveral parts of the kingdom, without the guard of a Ruffian army, which is a moft unpopular, though a very necefliary meafure at prelent: it is not clearly known from what fund the King is able to pay this regiment, though his oeconomy and private fortune would, in better tirnes, accomplifh it; but the public revenue, in the midfl of the prefent confufions, fuffers extremely. If he is able to augment this corps by degrees, in- troducing none but men of low birth, mefe foldiers of fortune, and abfolutely dependent on him, it may in time be a means of giving him an authority, which no other meafure will ever bring about; for Poland will never fee times of tolerable order, till her kings have abundantly more power than at prefent, and nothing but force will ever give theni that power. The fortifications at Warfaw ate fufficient to prevent the town being infulted by flying parties, or fmall armies, but could not ftand a fiege of any duration againfl an army well provided : it has two good walls, flanked by many baftions, and tolerably lined with ar- tillery; the ditch is broad and deep, and the waters of the Viflub may be let into it at plealure ; but the extent of thefe fortlficar ^ons is too great to be defended effecflunlly with POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 263 With kfs than eight thoufand men. Warfaw is populous; its being the capital of Poland always brought great numbers to fettle in it ; but the miferable ftate of moil of the other towns in the kingdom has lately increafed it very much, fb that the number of its inhabi-* tants are now computed to be above eighty thoufand « There are at prefent in it many Polifh families, once in affluence, but now re« duced to live in a very mean way : I am tald, that leveral cities in the Queen of Hungary's^ and King of Pruffia's dominions are alio full of them; Dantzick and Koningiburg, I know are. To what a fhocking flate is this fine coun- try reduced I wholly by the furious zeal of Roman- catholiek bifhops, who would never be fatisfied without the total deflrudlion of the Proteftants and Greeks. Upon our journey from Dantzick we met with a fmall party that attacked us, and were more than once in fight of a band -of robbers, who would have deflrayed us, had we been lefs guarded. This determined me in the journey I propofed making to Breflaw, to wait till I could go in fbme company that would be a protection. Fortunately this of- fered in a week, by the Dutch relident return- ing home by the route of Breflaw: he had a party of Ruflian foldiers for his proteClion, S 4 and 264 TRAVELS THROUGH and I was informed that I Ihould lay in plenty of provifions and wine for our journey, as we (hould pafs through a country that was nine parts in ten deflroyed. The 7th of May we fet out, and reached Rava the 9th ; the diftance about threefcore miles; the firfl five from Warfaw under cultivation, but all the reft one continued defart, and as pitiable a fight as could well be feen. This line of country was not long fince well peopled, and as well cultivated as any in Poland; which I could fee by the numerous ruins of villages, fingle cottages, and feats, fome quite deftroy- ed others tumbling down, and many in aihes: the country had moft of it been arable, but the plough had no longer any bufinefs here; all the territory prefented one face of defolation, the fields over- run with weeds, and becoming grafs, without any cattle to feed on them. Rava was once a pretty town, and well peopled, but it is now a heap of ruins; out of ten thoufand people that once lived here, there does not remain above feven-r teen houfes inhabited, and thofe by fome miferable creatures, too old to fly from the jnisfortunes of their town. From Rava to Sirad is one hundred miles; in which track of country, though it evidently {las all been cultivated, we faw but three vlU lagcs POLAND AND PRUSSIA. 265 kges Inhabited ; all the reft burnt, and the people gone ; the inhabitants of thefe yet venture to till a fmall quantity of land : we faw a little wheat, and feveral ploughs turn- ing in barley ; but who will reap it, the feedfmen little know. It is aftonifhing, that the country from Dantzick to Warfaw fhould efcape fo well, while this has fuffered fo fe- verely. I there faw many devastations 5 but they are nothing, compared with the condi- tion of thefe territories. Sirad was in arms both within and without the walls; we there- fore made a detour to the left, and palled it. From thence to the boundary of Silelia is about forty miles; all which is one continued fcene of ruin. This is a journey of near two hundred miles; and a more melancholy one can fcarcely be travelled. Moderately fpeaking, I do not believe there are five thoufand fouls left in the whole country, 3irad excepted, the ftate of which town we were acquainted with : you may every where trace the plough ; fome fields wholly ploughed, others half, others jufl: began, but all over- run with weeds and grafs ; iome re- rriains of corn on the ground that never was reaped; houles, barns, ftables, and all build- ings, either burnt doy/n, or failing for want of 266 TRAVELS THROUGH of repairs. Imagination cannot paint any fcene nnore dreadful. Thofe landlords only are tolerably off who fled to Germany at the beginning of the troubles, and live in expec- tation of peace, when they may return to their eftates; the property of them is left, and will, on a pacification, enable them to recover themfelves : but others, who, in their de- fence, or to fave their buildings from fire, bought off their enemies, met their fate at laft, and cannot return without the load of debts; fo that new buildings and fettlements will be impra6licable to them. I was affured, that there are fome hundreds of effates in the kingdom at prefent, without any owners exiffing, fo many whole families having beea deilroyed. Tra- Travels through Germany, [ 2% 3 CHAP, VIII. Silefia — Brejlaw — Journey to Berlin — The Country — Agriculture — Defcription of Ber- I'm — Prefent State of the King of Prujpa's Forces, Revenues, &c. — -Saxony — Leipjick — « Drefden— State of the Elediorate. NOTHING could be more ftriklng-, than the different appearance of Sileiia from that of Poland. We entered it at the 13th, and found the country full of villages, half of which, at leaft, were peopled with Poles; the land all cultivated, and much of it extremely well ; the houfes and cottages in good repair, with all the appearances of eafe and happinefs ; which formed fuch a contraft to the wretchednefs we had fo lately ieen, that the view had the effect of making Silefia appear a paradife. Much of this muft cer- tainly be occalioned by the great increafe of population, from fuch numbers of Poles, who fly to efcape the miferies that every where defolate and lay wafie their own co\intry. The King of Pruffia has officers appointed •along all his frontiers, to fee that ail theie poor people are received, and to provide cot- tages for them as fall as poffibie. In this = work 270 TRAVELS THROUGH work the King is at no expence ; he only grants them permiffion to build cottages on any waftes or comnaons that are not abfolute property; ^nd hi^ edi£t diredls, that evefv neighbourhood fhould give all due afliflancc to the new fettlers, and find them employ- ment in hufbandry or manufa£i:ures, after the rate of the country; and for the maintenance of flich as do not find employment, he dire£ls ^ tax to be laid on the diftridl ; but this can- jiot be lafting, as they have portions of land affigned them, fufficient for their maintenance when brought into culture. Upon the waftes belonging to the crown, thefe portions are confiderable enpugh to form, when cultivated, fmall farms, that hereafter will yield the crown a good rent. I faw many of thefe poor people, and it is hardly credible how much they feemed to enjoy themfelves, on efcaping the miferies of Poland, and finding fuch an humane protection in the territories of the neighbouring princes. 1 am informed that the Emprefs Queen receives them in the fame manner in Moravia, Auftria, and Hun- gary; many of them are in Tranfilvania. All the King of Pruflia's long line of frontier, from the bottom of Silefiato Livonia, is open to them; and great numbers take refuge in every part of it. I before gave an account of the GERMANY. a^i the multitudes to whom the Emprefs of Ruffia gave proteftion; if all this is confider- ed, itnauil at once be apparent, that the king- dom of Poland mufl be amazingly depopu- lated,, iince it cannot be doubted but feverai millions of people, probably not lefs than three or four, are driven out of the country, or killed. Such a depopulation will takeleveral ages to recover; and ftili this evil continues, without any appearance of its coming to aii end ; fo that what the event will be, ex- cept leaving that county a mere delart, is very difficult to know. We travelled thirty miles before we reached Breflaw. All this line of country is rich ei- ther in corn, meadow, or wood ; the arable lands feemed very well cultivated ; the wheat looked well, and the quantity of land occu- pied with it is coniiderable : they alio culti- vate rye : the barley was all coming up, aiijd feemed to promifee good crops ; they do not fow any oats ; but they cultivate many cab- bages as winter food for their cattle, and they reckon them much better, and to lafl longer thanturneps: potatoes tbey plant in large quantities for Breflaw, which city confumes a great deal of all the produdts of the earth ; a vaft advantage to all the neighbouring country: the {mall potatoes they fatten their hogs 272 TRAVELS THROUGH hogs with. The river Oder is navigable there, which is another great benefit to the country, always keeping the markets brifk, which, of all other circumftances, is the moft certain means of introducing good hufbandry. The cafe and happinefs of the peafants in this country is the more furprizing, as their taxes are very heavy, and carry as much into the King's coffers almoft, as into their own pockets. It can be attributed only to the re- gularity of his Pruffian majefty's government; for that monarch looks fo much into all his affairs, that there is no fuch thing in his do- minions as irregular oppreffion: no minifler, no officer, dares to lay the hand of power on the defencelefs poor ; the King is their pro- testor, and they had better be heavily taxed bv him, than pay lefs, but be open with it to thofe numerous and accidental oppreflions common in all other arbitrary governments. Breflaw is a very extenfive and well built city: it is mofl advantageoufly fituated on the Oder, upon the banks of which are fome very fme ftreets ; they are ftrait, well paved, and with many very well built houfes. There are feveral fquares in it, and many public buildings, worthy the attention of a traveller; among which are feveral churches, the Jefuits college, the town-houfe, the arfenal, the quay. GERMANY. 273 quay, 6cc. It is a bi{hop*s fee, but the cathe- dral has nothing remarkable in it : alfo the feat of an univerlity, which has for fome time been in a flourilhing fituation. It was pretty ftrongly fortified in the lafl war ; has a good wall, a double ditch, feveral baftions and ravelins, and a ilrong citadel ; but the works are fo extenfive, that they require an army to defend them. The King keeps a garrifon here of ten thoufand men; they are drawn up in the great fquare every day, and go thro* their exercifes, being as well-difciplined regi- ments as any in the King's fervice. There certainly refults from this ftrong garrifon, and the others throughout Silefia, which are ^11 proportionably numerous, great fecurity, of which the laft war was a very flriking proof; for, undoubtedly, the king owed his preferva- tion to the excellent order all his fortrefTes were in, and the numerous garrifons they were fur- nifhed with: had the Auftriansmethim unpre- pared, they would have at leafl wrefted Silefia from him, and perhaps have made fome im- preffionuponhis hereditary dominions. There are many churches and convents in the city ; but I did not hear of any thing in them that was particularly worthy of attention. There is a great trade carried on here by means of Vol. III. T the 274 TRAVELS THROUGH the Oder, and efpecially fince the canal was cut between that and the Elbe, which com- municates with Hamburg. The articles in which this commerce is particularly carried on, are linen and flax, corn, timber, plank, &c. all which are ftaple commodities in Si- lefia, and produced in very great plenty. Moft of the flaves which form fo great an export at Hamburgh come from this duchy j and the quantity of oak timber and plank, which is exported from it, is very confiderable. Upon all thefe articles the King lays a duty on the exportation 3 which is a piece of wrong poli- tics, and of fo flagrant a nature, that would make one think his abilities were thofe of a warrior alone. The trade of Breflawhas declin- ed a little fmce the troublesbroke out inPoland ; for in times of tranquility in that kingdom, this province exports large quantities of goods thither, particularly linens, of which the Poles buy more than any other nation ; but fmce the commencement of the civil war, they have been too much impoverifhed to be able to purchafe any quantity worth men- tioning. The manufa6lure of linen in Silefia is very confiderable: it employs many thoufands of neople, enriches the whole duchy, and brings in a very confiderable revenue to the King. Molt GERMANY. .275 Moll of the linens which are bleached at Haerlem in Holland, and afterwards are fo well kaown ander the name of Dutch, are made in Silefia: formerly immenfe quantities were confumed in England; but iince the great fuccefs which has attended the fabricks of Ireland and Scotland, this impolitic impor- tation is come to nothing, and thereby vaffc iums faved to Great-Britain. At this place I leflened my expences of travelling confiderably, by paying off all my attendants, except my old Swifs, Martin, who has rode through the beft part of Europe with me. The 1 6th I left Brellaw, taking a pofl- chaife to Steinau, on the Oder : the diftance thirty miles. This line of country is remark- ably fine, fully cultivated, and in general well peopled. Landed property here is much di- vided : here and there is found an old baron's eftate of great extent, around an old caftle, with all the marks of antiquity and grandeur; but in general the lands belong to perfons enriched by trade and manufadures, which has had one excellent effeft, that of diffufmg much more liberty among the peafants than, they have in other parts. Upon thefe ellates the lands are let in farms, as in England, and the peafants, not being vaflals tQ tenants, are T 2 bired 276 TRAVELS THROUGH hired in the manner of our day-labourers, which is the fyflem of all others the mofl beneficial. A common rent, in their farms, is from {even to eleven fhillings an acre : wheat yields two quarters an acre ; barley three ; buck-wheat four : the flax grounds are all inclofed by ditches, and they reckon an acre that yields three pounds a very good one. They keep all their cattle in winter in houfes, and feed them with boiled cabbages and ftraw. They lay raoft of the manure they make upon their cabbage grounds, in the culture of which plant they feem to be very attentive. They make great ufe of mud from the Oder as a manure, and value it fo much, that they go feveral miles for it. They plough their land with oxen ; the ftrudlure of their ploughs is remarkable; they feem, from the height of the wheels, to be very well in- flru6led in the dodrine of the lever. The 17th I reached Grumberg, through forty- five miles of very indifferent road; din- ing at Glogau, a pretty town, agreeably fitu- tuated on the Oder, very ftrongly fortified, andalwaysgarrifonedwithtwothoufandmen. It was anciently the refidence of the dukes of Glogau, and there are remains of their palace in the caftle. The cathedral is a very ancient and GERMANY. 277 and a fine building. They have (bme linen fabricks, and a good trade on the Oder. The country around it, and quite to Grumberg, is various, confiding of woods, arable, mea- dow, fome wafte, and alfo feme marih land. The villages are not very thick, and the pea- fan ts do not feem to be fo well off as thofe nearer to Brellaw; what the reafon is, I could not difcover. My next day's journey, was thirty miles, through Croflen to Frankfort on the Oder. CrofTen is the capital of a territory of the fame name : it is a very well-built town, hav- ing been rebuilt after a great fire, which happened at the beginning of this century : the ftreets are ftrait, broad, and well paved ; it is adorned with an handfome town-houfe, and five churches, one of which makes agood figure, being fituated in the middle of a fquare. Frankfort is in Brandenburg, and was once one of the moll conliderable cities in the Empire, being an hanfe town, and an Im- perial city j but it has loft moft of its privi- leges. It is divided into the old and new town by the Oder, over which there is a handfome bridge, inftead of an old wooden one, which was burnt in the laft war. The T 3 ftreets iy^' TRAVELS THROUGH flreets are handfome, and manyof thehoufes make a good figure, efpecially thofe which have been built fince the laft war. Their trade is confiderable, both with Berlin, Ham^ burgh, the Baltic, and all Silefias and before the war raged in Poland, with that kingdom alfo ; fo that it is one of the richeft places in the King's dominions. They have an univer* fity, but it is not very well flocked with ftu- dents of any confequence, though they have two well-built colleges. The town-houfe is an handfome building j and the arfenal is large and well filled. The moft agreeable part of the town is the great market-place, which is furrounded by the beft houfes in the place. The foil around Frankfort is fandy, and not very well inhabited : there is much wafte land, which might be cultivated to good pro- fit, confidering the near neighbourhood of fo many navigations, but encouragement feems to be wanting, I made many enquiries con- cerning the depred;itions of the Ruffians here; and from the information I could get, I have reafon to believe that the accounts we had in England were much exaggerated: they burnt feme villages, and raifed heavy contributions; but as to utterly dcftroying a whole track of country GERMANY. 279 country it was not true. Another circum- ftancel fiiould remark, which is, the mif- chief being all repaired which they did -, for I have yet feen no figns of any of that ruin which fell from their hands : this is to be at- tributed to the good condud of the King of Pruffia, who, notwithftanding the general fe- verity of his government, very wifely favour- ed thofe parts of his dominions that fuffered moll by war as foon as the peace was made. The 1 8th carried me 36 miles to Berlin, through a continued track of fand, yet tolera- bly cultivated in fome parts, but much of it a dreary wafte, and very thinly peopled. They find that the only very profitable crop upon thefe fands is buck-wheat, which they few in large quantities, and they get a produd: which equals the befl foils applied to that grain : when a piece of land has been more carefully managed than ordinary, it will yield a good crop of rye -, but as to wheat or barley, it is hardly to be feen. As I defigned to make fome flay at BerHii I hired private lodgings -, of which I had as good for fifteen fliillings a week as would have coft me five and thirty at London. But this city is not peopled proportionably to its T 4 fizcj aSo TRAVELS THROUGH fize j hence the general remark, that grafs is feen in the ftreets, which is, however, only in one negleded quarter of the town -, the other parts are very well built ; the flreets are re- markably fpacious, long, and well paved; and the buildings in general are fuch as certainly rank it among the fineft cities in Europe. Of the public edifices, thofe which are ufually vilited by travellers are, the royal palace, the arfenal, the churches of Notre Dame, St, Nicholas, St. Martin, and the Romifh chapel, the theatre, the equeftrian Hatue of Fre- derick the Firft, &c. The palace is a magni^ ficent but an unequal building, like all thofe * that are raifed at different times : fome of the apartments are large, and well proportioned ; but they by no means anfwered my expe6la- tions, either in dimenlions, fitting up, or fur- niture. Theimmenfityof filver, remarked by Mr. Hanway when he was here, was all melted in the late war, and very little of it is reftored. Much of the furniture, for a royal palace, is very mean ; but this we are not to be furprized at, as the King gives his attention to fo much greater objedts. Some of the picr tures are fine. The front of the arfenal would be very beautiful, but, as the above-men- tioned traveller juftly obferves, it if profafely loaded GERMANY. 281 loaded with ornaments. I viewed the con-, tents, and was much entertained with themj for, very contrary to what is fcen in moil other buildings under this name, here are no ufelefs arms, nothing but what is ready for immediate fervice. The train is a very fine one. The theatre is in a moft grand flile, admirably contrived to give much magnifi^ cence to the reprefentation of operas. A very few circumflances excepted, it deferves to be confidered as a model for theie buildings. The Romifh chapel is a monfter of difpropor- tion, but the portico is elegant. The equef- trian llatue of Frederick the Firfh is a fine performance j, the horfe is remarkably fine, and there is much fpirit in the attitude of the figure. The fortifications of Berlin are regular; but the city is of too great extent to have any thing of ftrength, if attacked by a powerful army. The number of inhabitants are rec- koned at about an hundred thoufand. There is always a garrifon of from eight to twelve thoufand men in it. Cbarlottenburgh is a fmall palace within a mile of Berlin ; the rooms of which are fmall, but very elegant : it contains nothing that appears very funking to a traveller; the ball-*rooin is handfome, but 282 TRAVELS THROUGH but much exceeded by many others. The gardens here, as well as at Potfdam, have nothing In them but regularity, which is dif- gufting. Sans Souci is a detached apartment in a garden 5 but nothing of this fort that I have feen abroad, iscomparable toanumberof places we have in England : nor do I think any of thefe palaces and boxes, in the neigh- bourhood of Berlin are tolerable in tafle : the only natural beauty they had was the river, and that is moulded into a canal for them : they have no verdure; the walks are fand, and the fituations in general flats. There is a good deal of commerce carried on at Berlin, by means of the canals which join the Spree and the Oder, and the Oder and the Elbe; by which means there is a moft advantageous communication with Ham- burgh, the Baltick, and all Silefia. This is of great confequenceto the manufadures of Ber- lin,which are numerous and fiourifhing: they have fabricks of filk, fluffs, woollen cloths of feveral forts, and in particular one which clothes moil of the army; tapeflry, laces, glafs, a little hardware, &c. The King gives great encouragement to all manufactures, which has had a great efle6l in a place where he found many fabricks, fixed by French refugees ;. GERMANY. 283 refugees after the revocation of the edid of Nantes, whofe poflerity now carry on the principal trade of the city. Bedin fuppjies Silefia with great quantities of thefe goods ; and before the civalwar raged in Poland, that kingdom took off much. They have a fmall export to the Baltic; formerly to Sweden, but that is now no more. I was twice or thrice at court, more to fee the King than for any other entertainment. I faw him about nine years ago, and was much furprized to fhid him fo little altered. The immenlity of fatigue, both of body and mind, which he went through during the laft war, one would have apprehended, muft have enri:irely broke him ; but he has, by a regular way of hfe, and great abflemioufnefs, both then and lince, prevented any ill effeds. Bodily fatigue maybe phyfick, and mental la- bour not very defi:ru6live, but anxiety is the deftroyer, againft which it is very difficult to guard: for feveral years the King was uncer- tain of his fate ; vi6tories had little effedt, de- feats were ruinous, and he could fcarcelycon^ jedure whether he was to be Gripped of fe- veral provinces, or even his whole dominions. In fuch a lituation, we may eaiily conceive that anxiety muft commit great ravages on him J 284 TRAVELS THROUGH him ; and I muft own myfelf furprized to fee his health continue fo good. His principal amufement is exercifing his troops 3 to fee them, is one of the moft entertaining fights at Berhn. It is thought that the King him- felf has not fo nice an eye as formerly to the m'muti^ of the tad:ic, but his officers keep it up in the highefl perfe<5lion. His army is at prefent more numerous, and better pro- vided than ever , they do not fall (hort of one hundred and forty thoufand men ; and there is not a regiment in his fervice that is not ready for marching: his whole army, ar- tillery, baggage, and all attendants, could be in the field upon a week's notice at any time; his fortreffes are all in better order than before the lail war, and fome places made of great llrength upon the frontiers of Silefia, which never before were fortified at all. His trea- fure is reported to be confiderable, and he certainly is not encumbered with debts ; for the lafl war, immenfe as it was to him, did not make him contract a fhillingof debt,tho' it is certain his antagonift, the Queen of Hun- gary, anticipated many of her revenues. If all things are confidered, it will appear very evident, that his power is better efla- bJiflied than ever, and that he has no profped c«r GERMANY. 285 of feeing alnQther Gonfederacy which will bear fo hard upon him as the laft. Auftria will not be eager to attack him, after having failed, with every pofTible advantage on her fide. If fhe could not wreft Silelia from him, when France, Ruffia, Sweden, and Saxony were in alliance with her, and their power fo a6lually brought to bear upon him, that he fought bat- tles with them all -, fuch a confederacy is not to be looked for in an age 5 and if it failed in its aim, that aim may be pronounced im- praftic^ble. Saxony it cannot be expedled will unite again, unlefs it be with Pruffia; but the fituation of it confidered, if it proves an enemy, it will be an enemy fwallowed up as in the lafl war, and the country made to con- tribute amply to pay the expence of it. Ruffia will fcarcely unite againft the King, with whom fhe is now in clofe alliance -, it would be extremely contrary to her intereft. France will always be found in full employ- ment by England 5 (he will not quickly fend armies againft Pruffia. The King therefore has the fatisfa6tion of enjoying peace. Thefe are the ideas of the Berlin politi- cians, who all declare the peace will be lad- ing, from the great jealoufy of Auftria and Ruflia, cither oppofing or uniting with each other : 286 TRAVELS THROUGH other : every party is flrongly armed, and looks on in filence, except RufFia, who, know- ing her own flrength, and fearlefs of confe- quences, carries on a moil extenfive war with Turkey and in Poland. The King's revenues amount at prefent to about a million and an half ilerling, a fum which in England appears fmall ; but if the different value of money there, and in Bran- denburg, be confidered, and likewife the un- common exertions of oeconomy unequalled in any other court, this fum, I am confident, is in the King's hands as good as four mil- lions, perhaps as five in England. The land- tax throughout his dominions is regular, and equals about nine fhillings in the pound : the crown lands yield a confiderable rent, and are as well managed to profit as a private rrentleman's eftate. The cufloms are but a fmall article ; they are gathered in his ports on the Baltick and at Embden. The excife is eenerai on all the neceffaries of life, and riles fo high as forty per cent. Thefe taxes are very heavy ; but fuch is the regularity of his government, and fo little oppreffion is met with from minifters and revenue-officers, that the people are beyond comparifon hap- pier than in the dominions of Saxoi>y, Au- flria. GERMANY. 287 ftria, or Bavaria. Much of his fuccefs in the late war was doubtlefs owing to the fubfidy he received from England : the difcontinu- ance of which, and the breaking off all con- ne6lions between the two courts, llruck hard upon him -, for it took him out of the hands of France, from whom he received a fubfidy of three hundred thoufand pounds a year, and left him without an equivalent from England. The treatment he received from the latter country, upon the change of that miniftry which had condu6led the war, made an im- preflion upon him much againft England, of whom he has often exprefled himfelf with fome acrimony : what the refult will be in future political arrangements is not eafy to fay ; but if the connexion continues between France and Auftria, that between England and Pruffia mufl-, in the nature of things, be renewed; for when one part of Europe throws itfelf into an alliance ofFenfive to the rcG:^ a counter alliance muft ever be formed, or all good ideas of politicks be abfolutely given up. The I ft of Jane I left Berlin, and got to Britzen, the dillance thirty miles : all which track of country is very fandy, though to- lerably populous, and fome of it well cul- tivated. aS8 TRAVELS THROUGH tivated. They fow much buck-wheat, and were now ploughing for turneps, which they fow the middle of this month : and I believe this root and buck-wheat, with a very little rye, to be all the produdls thefe poor fands yield, and yet they feem to be very well ma- nured ; for the countrymen houfe their cattle in winter, and raife by that means large quan- tities of dung, which they mix with a kind of iliff earth, which they dig from under the fandj acompoftwhichi fhould fuppofe mufl agree extremely well with fuch dry barren foils. The 2d I advanced no further than Wit- tenburg, the diftance only 15 miles. In this journey from Brandenburg to Saxony the foil changes almofl immediately for the better, and the population of the country alfo. The foil is a good loam, which yields tolerable crops of wheat; they have alfo bar- ley, and I remarked a few pieces of flax. Wittenburg was noted before the lafl war for its cloth manufadlories, and for dying bet- ter than at any other place in the ele6lorate ; the latter bufmefs is yet found here, though not near fo much as formerly ; but mofl of its fabricks are removed to Berlin, fo that the place • Gl E R M A N Y. ' 289^ place ht? ni>t been able to recover the ruin i^ met witkJQ the war. Martin Luther's church is yet ilanding, tho' three hundred years old, and has feep fo n;i-any lieges, cannonade^, and bombardments, without any damage. The gd I went to Leiplick, the dlflance 30 miles, through a country naturally exceed- ingly Certile, bu.t carries many mark-s of the miferies of the late war. Moft of it has been well cultivated, but upon riding intq feveral fields, now in grafs, and whofe appearance indicates wfetched management, I fouud they had been arable ones within a few years j and upon making enquiries, I had feveral fpots pointed QU^ to me whereon flood fmall vil* iages, confining of farm-houfes, now no more; and all the lands which belonged to them, and once yielded abundant crops of cora^ are now little better than wafte and com? mon foreil land, whereon the tenants of ths fame landlord turn their cattle. This is imt the cafe with two or three places, hut coa*' tinues for many miles; and is owing to the nobles, to whom the country belongs, having ruined themfelves with paying military con* tributions fo often, that at laft they had nq* thing tp pay, when their buildings were burnt down, and themfelves left tQQ pQor to ere«3t , Yql. III. U new J90 TRAVELS THROUGH new ones : this is generally the reafbn why the feat of war is fo very injurious to a coun- try; for nothing is fo great an evil as land proper for cultivation, belonging to own- ers too poor to raife the buildings neceffary for bringing it into cui'ture. If the landlords of fuch a country would allow every thing to be deflroyed the firft campaign, they would be reduced, it is true, but then they would be free from thofe enormous debts which not only carry their ruiTi with them to the graves of fuch as groan under them, but entail mifery upon their children. Leipfick, the fuburbs included, is one of the moft eoniiderable cities i>n this part of Germany, i>otwrthftanding its having fuffer- ed very feverely in the two laft wars, and felt fome heavy ftrokes, which are not yet recovered : it has been the theatre of almoft every war that has happened in Germany. In the famous one of thirty years it was very often taken and retaken by the Swedes and Imperialifts ; no lefs than five times in two years. It felt the weight of Charles XIl's invafion of Saxony, than whom there have been, few more brutal invaders. And the two laft wars fucceeding each other very quick- ly, 'its- trade aiid buildings much declined in " . -i >^ them. GERMANY. 291 them. The city itfeif is not an agreeable place, from the narrownefs of the flreets, and the height of the houfes, which rife to eight or nine ftorids ; but the fuburbs are much more fpacious and better built : they are alfo pleafant, from the number of areas and gar- dens in them, and from the conflux of three fmall rivers. They have not many publick buildings at Leipfick that much deferve a ilranger's attention ; the beft among them is St. Nicholas church, which is a very fine iCdifice. The town-houfe in an old but "a good flrudture ; the exchange is another ; and around the great market place are many houles of private merchants which make an uncommon figure for buildings of that fort; but there are leveral traders in the city that have made coniiderable fortunes, and before the lail war there were treble the num- ber; but the greatefl among them, upon the breaking out of it, removed themfelves and their effects to Hamburgh. The univerlity is one of the moft famous in Germany, and much frequented by ftudents of family and^ fortune; but this alfo declined much in the lafl: war. Trade is the foul of Leipfick : confider- ing that it is an inland place, and without th^ advantage even of a navigable river, tbegreat- U a nefs '292 TRAVELS THROUGH nefs of its commerce is very furprizing ; but i it is owing to its fairs, of which they have ^ three very confiderable ones every year. To them merchants bring or fend goods of all forts from every part of Europe: all the ma- nufaftures of Germany, France, Italy, Eng- land, Holland, and Flanders are met with here: vaft magazines are formed of Eaft In- dia goods of all forts ; of Weft India com- modities ; of wines, brandies, fruits, {ilk, hemp, flax, iron, and, in a word, all forts of produ(£ls; and purchafers refort hither from every part of Germany and the North. Theie fairs alfo carry off great quantities of the fabricks which are made at Leipfick, of which there are feveral forts ; fuch as iilk, cotton and woollen manufadlures, paper, o-old and filver laces, &c. but all thefe fuf- fered much from the laft war; nor have they recovered themfelves to any thing like their former fuccefs : indeed, I obferved, in converfation with feveral merchants here, that they had all a diftruft that they w^ere by 110 means fecure from frefli vifits of the Pruf- iians; and while this is the cafe (at which we cannot be furprized) it is not to be won- 'dered that commerce and manufadlures do -not thrive. The injury the whole eledtoratc fuftained G. E R M A N .Y. . 293 fuflained lafl war, in the deftrudlon of its manufadlures and trade, the ruin of its agri- culture, and the decline of its population., was of an exceedingly great amqunt, and fuch as cannot be recovered without the moft unremitting attention, and political condud of half a century ; before which time it will prohably fee, in fome caufe or other, a renewal of its calamites. If thefe circumftances are coiilidered, with the opprefiive government of all the German princes that have an ahfolute authority, we fliall have reafon to wonder at any trade at all being found in Saxony. The 6th I travelled thirty miles to MeiiTen^ through the fineft part of Saxony ; and which, notwithflanding the fury of the late war, is now a populous and a well cultivated country ; there is a great deal of arable land, and very ^ne champain fields, covered.with corn ; many villages, and the people feemed to be a6live, and quite alive in their bufinefs. Part of the females were collected in fmall knots in the villages, fpinning wool; others drove the horfes and oxen that drew the ploughs : this em- ployment of the women is an excellent fign, where the men do not, in consequence, indulge in idlenefs, which is the cafe in fome countries. They cultivate a great deal of wheat and barley, and were now fowing fome U 3 buck- 2<3+ TRAVELS THROUGH buck-wheat ; but it is a grain for which their lands are too good, the poorefl fands will rival them: they cultivate turneps, cab- bages, and alfo cabbages for feeding them- felves and their cattle : their herds are nume- rous; they feed them not only in their mea- dows, but alfo upon clover, of which I faw feveral large pieces, a thing I had not re- marked of a long time. I enquired into their management of it; they fow it with barley, and in the fucceeding year either mow it twice for hay, thrice fometimes ; or elfe feed Iheep, young cattle, cows, oxen, and horfes upon it : the hay they prefer to meadow hay. They keep it two years upon the ground, and after that plough it up for any fort of crop, but do not feem to confider it as a peculiar preparation for wheat, which is the idea in England : it has not long been cultivated here, but Ip reads very faft, from their find- ing the profit of it to be great. The lands here are cultivated by both the landlords and peafants; the latter are, in general, farmers, and not of very little fpots, but they are bound to apply a partof their time with their teams, &c. to cultivate thofe parts of the cf^ate which the landlord holds in his own hands, and which are ufually pretty confider- able. MeifTen GERM A N Y. :29s Melflen is a little town, weakly fortified, but with a ftrong caftle on the Elbe : it is only remarkable (the Drefden porcelane ex- cepted) for a covered bridge of wood over that river: the cathedral I had been told was a fine building, with many fine electoral mo- numents in it, but I found it worthy of very little obfervation. The manufacture of por- celane was once more famous here than at any other place in Europe, but the lafl war almoft ruined it; upon the King of Pruffia's irruption into Saxony, mofl of the workmen and the materials were removed ; but the war continuing lb long, and Saxony remaining in the hands of the Pruffians, fome of the people died, and others were loft; fbme the ' King of Pruffia fecured, and fent them to Berlin, where he attempted to eflablifh a fimilar manufactory, but he has executed no- thing comparable to the old Drefden pieces. Upon the eftablifhment of peace the works at Meiflen were reftored, and a frefh fet of workmen, with fome old ones, refumed the manufactory : I have feen the beit pieces they have made, and fhall venture to affert, that the manufacture is loft; for they are not, in the clearnefs of the white, to be compared with what they formerly made : as to fine painting, it is any where to be had, and there- U 4 ~ fore !i96 TRAVELS THROUGH fore not peculiar to the Drefdeii ware. This is a great lofs to the curious, and lovers of fine porcelane all over Europe; and the more fo, as none of the numerous fabricks fet up in England, France, or Holland, have come near equal to it. The 1 7th I reached Drefden, which is only fifteen miles from MeifTen, through the moil heautiful line of country I have feen in Ger- many : it is all hill and dale, corn, vines, iand meadows along the banks of the Elbe, a continued pi6t:ure: the river is every wher6 feen to advantage, with the beautiful circum- ftance of the banks being high and woody ; a more entertaining pi£lurefque fcene can hardly be viewed. Drefden, I can eafily conceive, was, before the deflrudion of the fuburbs, one of the fineft cities in Europe; but the Pruffians have much reduced its beauty, hy burning down a great part of the moft beautiful quarters of it. The old city is fortified in a regular manner; the baftions are of ftone, and there is a double ditch, but yet the ftrength of it is nothing, unlefs the garrifon be very nume-» rous. The river Elbfe divides it into two cities, the old and the new. The bridge over that river, which is built of ftone, is reckoned the finefl in Germany; but no perfon who has feen GERMANY. 597 ieeti that at Weftminfter, will think there is either beauty or magnificence in it. It is five hundred and fiorty feet long, thirty fix broad, and confifts of nineteen arches. The cleddral palace is not a very ftriking building for the beauties of architecture, but there are tnany very fine and fpacious apartments in it very fplendidly furnifhed ; much of it done fince the v^af ; for fome of the befi: furniture was ruined by the Prufi^ans, and avafi: num* ber of curiofities carried off. The King, it is fuppofed, did not defign to touch any thing, and no commander keeps a more regular dif- cipline, but in fb long a war fo full of events, and thofe remarkably fevere, a place of curi- ofities muft neceflarily fare but badly. The ftables form a magnificent building, being very fpacioUs, and vvere once filled with fome of the finefi: horfes in Germany, but many of the ftalls are now unoccupied : indeed the revenues of the eledlorate fuffered to fo great a degree in the late war, that Drefden has ever fince exhibited a very different appear- ance ; the court is no longer what it was ; and all thofe circumftances which flow from great revenues, have funk proportionably to the decline which the Saxon income has ex- perienced. No court in Germany was fo pro- fufe, but there is an oecoiiomy in it now, which a^g TRAVELS THROUGH which promifes a much happier adminiflra- tion of affairs than has been experienced in the two laft. The Romifli chapel is one of the fineft edifices at Drefden : it is a well-proportioned and magnificent building, mofl highly orna- mented: it was built for the private ule of the late King and his court. The chamber of curiofities hath yet a great many very beautiful models and toys, which Cannot fail entertaining any traveller; and the colledion, which they call the Kunts-kam- mar, which is chiefly of natural rarities, is e- qual to any thing that can be feen; but as the particulars of thefe things have been publifhed by more than one traveller, I fhall not fwell thefe pages with a recital of them. The gallery of pictures is equal to moft that are to be feen in Italy, and are kept in admirable prefervation. The pieces by Correggio are to be equalled no where but in Parma. A very magnificent work, containing plates of all the pictures in this gallery, was publiflied at Drefden, under the direct infpedlion of the late King. The Indian palace, of which feveral wri- ters have given long accounts, is, in my opi- nion, a very filly affair; and by no means even elegant. Count -Bruhrs famous palace fuf- fercd GERMANY. 299 fered moft feverely in the war, at which no- body was concerned, from the foundation of all his grandeur being laid in the miferies of the Saxons, and from his being the principal plotter and advifer of that war, which ruined his mafter. The picture gallery is one of the lineft rooms I have any where feen. From the befl accounts I could get while at Drefden, the decline in all the affairs of confequence throughout the government of Saxpny, upon account of the late war, is muc!h greater than has been thought by fome authors who have written lately. Before the war, the revenues of the eledorate, by means however of very great oppreffion, amounted to a million and an half fterlhig; but I was af^ fured, that they do not at this day, although near feven years of peace have intervened, rife to feven hundred thoufand pounds, and yet the government is burthened with a very heavy debt. Saxony, before the war, contained, near two millions of people ; it has not now much above one. In Drefden were an hun- dred and ten thoufand people, but at.prefent jt would be difficult to find half the number; fuch flrong marks of decline are not to be miflaken, they fhew the feverity of the lat^ war in the mofl ilriking colours j and prove clearly, 300 TRAVELSTHROUGH clearly, that if it had continued much longer, the whole electorate would have been made a defart. The prefent government conduds all things in a very fenfible and political manner: they find the wretched ftate of the country will ad- mit of nothing but an oeconomy, which has not been pradlifed in this country for a long while ; the people fee and know the public diftrefs, and do not repine at the taxes they are forced to pay, as did all when the amount was fquandered by Count Bruhl, and the King, in cloaths, toys, and gewgaws. Only fifteen thoufand regular troops are kept up, but they have five or fix thoufand militia re- gularly difciplined. This is certainly a(fling with prudence ; for the whole country is fo impoveirifhed, that if they raifed by taxes a revenue to do otherwife, it muft be by the ruin of the people. They mnft have time, not only to recruit their lofTes, but alfo their num- bers. The foil is in general fertile, and the Saxons are induflrious enough to bring it into culture, if they have time given them, with- out making even peace itfelf too burthenfome by taxation, and without hurrying them into another war, which could not fail of being ruinous to the whole electorate . Some en- couragement has been given to agriculture and " U S R MAN Y. 3ot. and manufa<3:uTes iince the peace, particu* larly by an exemption from taxes in certain cafes wherein they would be extremely bur- thenfbme : but the effential foundation of tolerable cultivation, or adivity in carrying on fabricks, is wanting, which is wealth, or at leafl eafy clrcumftances in the undertakers; but this electorate the Pruffians exhaufted to fo great a degree, that they left fcarcely any wealth in it : the lands are in the hands of nobility fo reduced that they can fcarcely live; much lefs are able to carry on improve- ments in the manner requilite at prefent for being effectual in reviving hufbandry in their country ; and when this is the cafe, fuch a fenovation mull: be left to common caufes, the increafe of the people, and of induftry a- mong the lower clafles, w^hich is always of moft (low operation. The amazing difference of the event of the war to Brandenburg and Saxony is fliriking : the latter is fo ruii;ied and exhaufted, as to lye almoft at the mercy of any invader; with- out people, trade, revenues, or forces, on a comparifon with what all thofe articles were before the war: on the contrary, the King of Pruffia is in pofleffion of as great an income .as ever; a finer army than when he began the war: his dominions fuffered indeed, but the wounds j02 TRAVELS THROUGH wounds feem to have been but fkin-deep: certainly his country was not made the feat of war, in the manner he made that of the Elector of Saxony. The contraft indeed is fo ftriking, that if ever a new war breaks out between Pruffia and Auflria, Saxony moft inidoubtedly will not join the latter. The 1 2th I fet out from Drefden, and got to Leutmeritz, in Bohemia, in two days, pacing through Pirna, and by the famous caftle of Koningftein. Pirna is a little place among the mountains, and Koningftein is a caftle fituated on the top of a rock, three hundred feet high, and half a mile in circum- ference. The way to it is fb difficult, that a company is fufficient to defend it againft an army. In it is a well above fixteen hundred feet deep, which fupplies the garrifon with water. In the labyrinth of thefe rocks and mountains the King of Pruflia caught the Saxon army and made them prifbners. The country is in general very wild and romantic, and the views of the Elbe running through fuch a region of mountains extremely gro- tefque. There are fbmevineyardsplanted upon fouthern fpots of thele mountains, where thp grapes ripen tolerably, but the wine is not drinkable to thofe who have been ufed to that which is good, CHAP. GERMANY. ^©3 CHAP. IX. journey acrofs Bohemia — Prague — Defcrip- tion of the country — 'The people — Nobility — Hujbandry — Manufadiures — Moravia — ■ Olmutz-^Brinn — Journey to Vienna — De- fcription of the capital, LEUTMERITZ is a fmall town in Bo- hemia, fituated on the river Elbe; it has {ovciQ fortifications, but none of any great ftrength : near this place the King of Pruffia gained a great vidory over the Auftrians in the laft war. The neighbouring country was ieveral times the feat of war, and fufFered much : part of the mifchiefs done are not yet recovered ; for there are feveral tracks of land, belonging to a Bohemian nobleman, who re- sides at Vienna, which were once arable, but are now over-run with grafs and weeds, and ftill have not near a ftock of cat- tle proper for the land ;, and fome villages arc of a very poor appearance, with feveral houfes almoft burnt down, that have not yet been repaired. The country that is cultivated does not feem to be managed in an able man- ner^ 304 TRAVELS THROUGH ner, and the peafants are much worfe treated than they are in Saxony. The 1 8th I reached Prague, the capital of Bohemia, and one of the largeft cities in Eu- rope. The country through which the road runs is various; much of it is of a fruitful foil, and tolerably cultivated in fome parts, but there are in every track many marks of bad hulbandry and inattention, greatly owing, I fuppofe,to a want of induftry, and partly to the oppreffion which the peafants experience. They have fome tolerable crops of wheat, but I never faw worfe barley, or any corn more full of weeds; and they value it (6 little, that on various pieces of barley and peafe I faw cattle feeding, which made me enquire if they were fown with Intention to be eat green ; but that was not the cafe, it is a mere inftance of ftupid negled. I obferv- ed one or two pieces of flax, which looked very well. The winter food of their cattle is principally the cabbage turnep, and re4 cabbage, which they cultivate in large quaiii tities. I faw feveral young plantations of them, but they do not feem to manage them well. Prague is very well fituated on the river Muldaw; it is divided into two cities by that river. The fortifications are regular, and much GERMANY, 305 rnitch fuperior to what they were before the lafi war; but the city is of fo great an extent that it requires an army to def. nd it. It fuf- fered very much by the liege it flood in. the beginning of the war againfh the King of Pruf- lia, who cannonaded and bombarded it in fo fevere a manner, that not many buildings efcaped; whole quarters were beat down, or burnt, and I was fhewn feveral vei-y large gardens and young orchards, which be- fore that liege were entirely covered with houfes, and the people are too poor to re- build them in a place where there are yet more houfes than are occupied : fcarcely any of the publick buildings efcaped damage at the fame liege. The univerlity is one of the moft famous in Germany, and has a vafl number of Undents ; the people at Prague talk of five thoufand } what they might be formerly I know not, but at prefent they are Ihort of three thoufand. In 1409, when John Hufs was redor, it is a fa6t that there were thirty thoufand ftudents here. The Jefuits College is one of the finefl buildings in the city, but it fuffered by feveral unlucky can- non balls, and is not thoroughly repaired. The bridge, which joins the old and the new town, is fifteen hundred and eighty feet long, •by thirty^broad, and has feventeen arches, and Vol III. X is 305 TRAVELS THROUGH is all of ftone 5 it is a folid edifice, has no- thing of elegance in it 3 and when a traveller hears that it was an hundred and fifty years a building, he will fuppofe it muft have been m ^a age extremely poor, or been undertaken by a prince of little fpirit. The finefl edifices in the world are rarely thofe which were fo long in raifing. St. Peter's at Rome is an in- ftance againfl me; but St. Paul's at London, and the bridge at Weftminfler, are fi:rong ones in my favour, and many more might be quoted. The royal palace, and the cathedral, are very mean buildings, and contain fcarcely any thing worthy of notice. What at Prague are much the beft worth feeing, are the pa- laces of the nobility; fome of which are very noble edifices, thatwould make a great figure in the beft built cities of Italy ; feveral of them are of very great fize, with moftfpacious apartments, and very magnificent furniture. Thofe of the princes Lobcowitz, and Ifchar- nan, and the counts Gala, Straka, Czaflaw, and Manflein, deferve particular attention ; they contain many apartments that are worthy of fovereign princes, but the number of very good pictures is trifling. Moft of the Bohemian nobility, who are a numerous body, keep their refidence in win* ter at Prague, and in fummer on their eftates. None GERMANY. 307 Kone of them refort to Vienna, but filch as ^re in office ill the court, which is a very un- fconimdn inftance. It is their prefence in this city that alone fupports it : for without their refort, and the garrifon, which is generally pretty niinierdus, the city would be a defart, being utterly deftitute of both trade and ma- nufadtures : the univerlity does fomething, biit iiot much. All the lower clafles here are poor; the burghers are treated by the nobles very contemptuoufly, to a degree not com- 4non elfewhere : if the plac*^ was ever fo well iituated for trade, or manufa6lure, this would be d fure rrieans of damping their progrefs. The 1 6th I left Prague, and went to Nym- burg, a fmall town twenty five miles diHant ; the country various, but much of it pretty tolerably cultivated, rather better than the track to the north of Prague. The peafants are treated in a wretched manner j they have hovels of the worft fort to live in, little better than thofe in Weftphalia, being loofe ftones laid on one another for the walls, and the cre- vices filled with mud, and the covering fome ilrong poles, with turf fpread 0:1 them, and a hole at top in the middle is all the chimney that any of them have ; adjoining is their barn, built of the fame materials, in which they fto^w their little corn, and keep their X 2 cattle 308 TRAVELS THROVOU cattle in winter ; each cottage has a few acres of land around it, with a cow or two, and a miferable pair, either of horfes or oxen, for ploughing their land. In general, Sunday is the only day in the week which they are al- lowed for cultivating- this land, in order to raife provifioiiS for fublifiing on the whole week ; but in feed-time and harveft their lords indulge them with another. When I fpeak therefore of the hufbandry of the coun- try, I do not mean of the peafants-, nor of the farmers, for there is fcarcely any fuch thing, but of the nobility, and other land- iords, who all cultivate their own eftates by means of their agents and Rewards. The peafants in every refped refemble nearly thofe of- Poland, than whom they are not favoured more. . At nrfl fight it may appear, that landlords, who a6t upon this fyflem, muft make far more of their eilates than thofe who lett them in the Engllfli manner to farmers, becaufe .here the profit of the farmer is confolidated 'with that of the landlord ; but, from the re- .peated obfervations wliich I have often had occafion of making, I am convinced that the cafe is the very contrary. If any eftate was only of fuch a fizc as to form a good farm it would be very tiiiej but eflatCvsare thus cul- tivated GERMANY. 309 fivated whofe extent is from twenty to thirty thoufand acres of cultivated land, either meadow, pailure, arable, fheep-walk, or woods, all in fotne culture or other, and a vaft track arable. To be forced to cultivate fuch immenfe f^ms, they are obliged to have fwarms of bailiffs and agents. In every place where a farm-houfe fhould be is a bailiff's houfe, who manages a certain track of land. Thus the landlord is at tl>s monflrous ex- pence of flocking his whole eftate, and run* ning all the chances of that flock, and at the fame time has to keep as many bailiffs as if they were farmers, and who all live out of the land before he has his clear profit, as much as if they were farmers ; with this great dif- tin^lion, that being merely fervants they have little interefl in the fuccefs of their huf- bandry, and confequently the mafler fuifers all the ufual inconveniences of fuch a fitua- tion : his agents of all forts cofl him as much as farmers would make for themfelves, fup- pofmg them honefl ; and if they turn out otherwife, a great deal more. Thus he gets none of the farmers profit, at the fame time that he lofes the intereft of all the money employed in flocking, and bears the chances to which that flock is liable. From which ftate of the affair I think it is very evident, how X 3 much 310 TRAVELS THROUGH much more beneficial it is to lett out an eftatq to farmers, for them to find the ftock, cul- tivate the land, and employ the peafants, not only in mere profit of the year, but with a view to future improvement^, which muft always be conducted with far more efFe6l by the pepple who work for their own intereft, than by others who do it for a mailer ^ and a mafter perhaps who is always abfent, or, if* prefent, who underftands nothingof the mat- ter. What great improvements have been made in England by tenants, who enjoy the benefit during their leafe, and then pay a frefh rent to their landlords on account of thofe very improvements ! In population alfo the prince would reap a very great benefit ^ for when men are working for themfelves, their induftry will be very different from that of fervants; and in proportion to the general in- duftry, muft population be : the peafants would likewife meet with lefs oppreffion, and confequently increafe more. They fow a good deal of wheat in this line of country, but theirprincipal crop is barley. I obferved many plantations of hops in the warm vales, where the foil is rich and deep : it is a common culture in mofl parts of Bohe- mia, I am told ; and when the fpot chofen for a hop-garden is fuitable, they find it more profitably GERMANY. 311 profitably applied than for any other crop. Beer is a very great article of trade throughout the kingdom, much being exported to all the furrounding countries 5 this makes barley and hops particularly advantageous. Saffron is another crop, which I faw now and then : they prefer a light, dry loam on a ftratum of rock for it ; they think it very profitable ; an acre of good faffron is worth about three pounds here. Turneps and cabbages they have in large quantities for the winter fupport of their cattle : they prefer the latter in general : I faw many crops fomewhat advanced in growth, but they do not feem to be attentive to keeping them free from weeds. The 17th I reached LeutmylTel, at the dif- tance of forty-five miles, paffing through two or three pretty towns upon the banks of the Elbe. This country is more beautiful than the preceding, and of a richer foil ; in fome parts there are hills, but not fo great as to be unprofitable land, while the vales form fome very rich arable and meadow land ; moft of which is pretty well cultivated, under wheat, barley, and beans, which are much fown here • wheat yields from two, to two and an halfquarter per acre j barley fomething more; beans four quarters ; they choofe for thefe theirftiffeflwet foils. They feed on their mea- X 4 dows 312 TRAVELS THROUGH dows large herds of cows and oxen, and keep many fheep, but do not manufad:ure the wool; rnoft of it is fold to Silelia and Saxony, . both of which are much more induflrious countries : They work up however fome of their own flax into the fame fort of linens as are made in Silefia, which is an employment of the poor people in many of the little towns in this kingdom; their earnings at thisi work are very fmall ; a weaver in Silefia will earn about three and lixpence a week, but in Bohemia not more than half a crown; but provifions of all forts are very cheap in both thefe countries. I faw two or three country feats belonging to noblemen ; they are all built in the caftle form, with a moat round, and feem to be extremely fpacious : a noble- man of great fortune in this country has fel- dom lefs than two or three hundred fervants about him, when at his caftle in the country ^ andhe is an abfolute monarch upon his eflate, with power over every thing but life and death, and the royal revenue officers. This kind of dominion over all the lower cb.iTes flatters the vanity andpride of the great, more than the amount of the advantages they would gain by the peafants being free : it is like the contrail of abfolute authority to the limited pov/er poireffed by fome kings; the latter makc:j GERMANY. 313 jnakes their people happy and rich, and might have the fame eiFe6l upon themfelves, qut they are all hunting after the former. The 1 8th I got to Olmutz, the capital of Moravia, the diftance forty miles, crolTmg the mountains which feparate the two countries ^ thefe are not very lofty, nor craggy, but they fill a track of country of feveral miles broad 1 they exhibit a wild territory, but little of which is cultivated : the peafants that in- habit thefe hills are a rough intractable fet of men, that will not fubmit to the oppref- iions underwhich their brethren of the plains groaui they have been often in rebeliion, not againft the fovereign, but the lords to whom they are vaflals ; they are, in many refpeds, treated much better, and their houfes and little farms make a much better appearance.; they have more and better cattle ; fome of them are in polleflion of fmall pieces of land which they have purchafed, and ail are ex- tremely tenacious of this kind of property ; they do not work for their mafters more than three days in a week. It is alv/ays to be re- marked, that the gradations of freedom are ever to be found in mountainous countries ^ in general fach are free > but even under abfo- lute monarchs they enj^y more liberty, than the fubjefts of the fame prince who inhabit - plain 3H TRAVELS THROUGH plain countries. To live In hilly countries requires moreaftivityandvigourof bodyj the very moving from one place to another is la- borious ', the cold and bluftering climates found in them contribute to bracing up the human body, and to make it hardy. It hath the fame effeft as is fcQn in cold climates, compared with hot ones, in vsrhatever parts of the world they may be found. After the mountains are pafTed that feparate the two countries, I went through a great extent of forefl and marfh land, very little of which is cultivated ; and not much of it would pay for culture, unlefs the couiitryin general was jicher than it is. Olmutz is a fmall but very well built city, prettily fituated on the little river Moravia. It is a ftrong place both by nature and art ; fo that the King of Pruffia,when he made the famous irruption into Moravia, and laid fiege to it, did not feem to have had good intelli- <^ence of the ftate of the town, or thegarrifon. The rtreets are regular and well paved, and there are many good houfes in it ; the only public buildings of any note are the Jefuits college, the bifhop's palace, and the tovvn- houfe;themarketpiaceisfurroundcdbyfeveral well built houfes. It is an agreeable town, ,ind the inhabitants feem to be a veryfociable people. GERMANY. 315 people, with more adivity andinduflry than is to be found among the Bohemians. Pro- vifions are very cheap here : I Hved at the Emprefs's Arms inn two days upon ex- ceeding good fiih and fowl, and good Hunga- rian wine; and when I paid my reckoning, I found that fix fhillings went to the full as far as a guinea in England. Beef is only three halfpence a pound; mutton is fometimes fold at a penny; and a fat turkey is to be bought for fourteen pence. The 2ift 1 left Olmutz, and proceeded to Brinn, the dilfance thirty miles, through a much more fertile country than north of Olmutz ; it is better peopled, and much more of it cultivated: they do not fow much wheat here, but a great deal of rye, barley, peafcj and beans and the crops in general carried a good appearance : they keep great herds of cattle, feeding them in winter on cabbages, turneps, and flraw ; all the latter, which they give to their cattle, they cat al- moft as fmall as chaff, with an engine made onpurpofe, very different from the chaff-cut- ter ufed in England. They chop the turneps or cabbages into fmall pieces, and give them with chopt ilraw,and find that they go much the farther, and nourifh the cattle much bet- ter. I never heard of any thing of this fort >£ino- 3i6 TRAVELS T H R O UGH being praclifed in England ; yet I fiiould ap- prehend that it could not fail of anfwering extremely ; it is certainly much worth the trial. They have vaft herds of fwine, which find their own fubliftance in woods, and fwampy grounds, for mofl part of the year. They fatten them on beans, peafe, and po- tatoes, which they cultivate on purpofe j fend- ing great quantities of bacon to Vienna, &c. Brinn is well fituated on the confluence of two rivers, and is reckoned the ftrongeft place in Moravia ; it has a caftle that is veryftrong; the Auftrians have ufually a good garrifon here ; feveral new fortifications have been ad- ded, both to this place and to Olmutz, lince the laft war, which I fuppofe were occafioned by the King of PrufTia's bold march into this country, which alarmed them excefTively at Vienna. There are about fix thoufand inha- bitants in Brinn ; the flreets are narrow and crooked, but many of the houfes very well built, and fome of the public edifices make a tolerable appearance, particularly the Jefuits college, and the churches of St. James and St. Thomas. The 22d I reached Laba, a little town thirty miles fromBriiin; the country between them is better than the preceding ; has lefs wafte land, fewer forefls and marihcs ; and the GERMAN Y. 517 tlie arable land beyond com parifon better cul- tivated r this is in a great meafure owing to the attention given to hufbandry improve- ments by the court of Vienna, They were at the expence fome years ago of bringing fe- veral Flemilh farmers from the country be- tween Oftcnd and Bruges; three of them were fettled in this country, being fupplied with all forts of implements, cattle, houfes, land, &c. by the Emprefs Queen, and fixed upon fome walle biit very fertile lands belonging to the crown. They have had a large fuccef- fion of Moravian peafants regularly v/ork- ing under them, in order to be inftruded in theFlemifh hufbandry; who being difcharged when freOi ones are taken have much fpread fevefal excellent cuftoms, and will in all pro- bability much improve the agriculture of the greatefl part of the province. The effcS: has already been very coniiderable ; for though- thefe Flemings do not occupy a thoufand acres of land in all, yet their methods already fpread over a country near fifteen miles lon«-j all the hufbandry of which is by their means much improved. They have introduced clo- ver here, which turns out one of the mod "beneficial crops that can be fown ; they have alfo made this culture of clover a preparation for wheat, fo that they have almofl entirely baniihed 3iS TRAVELS THROUGH banifhed the cuilom of fallowing for wheat, which was the common method in Moravia. Spurry they alfo brought with them, with which they fed cows. To them likewife the Moravians are indebted for a much more fy- ftematic management of manure than what they formerly followed : They form compofls of dung, rotten vegetables, vafl quantities of leaves, fwept up on purpofe in the open forefts, turf,a{hes, and other materials, which they mix together feveral times, and fpread upon their clover fields, and on their cabbage grounds. They have alfo made them abun- dantly more attentive in keeping all their crops clear from weeds, and in good order, by hoeing and weeding ; all the cabbages 1 faw in this diftridl, which has been profited thus from the example of the Flemings, were in very fine order, both in refpedl to pul- verized foil, and a clearnefs from weeds. I faw the caftle of baron Skulitz, who had been extremely attentive in fpreading this good Flemifh hufbandry. He refides con- ll:antly on his eftate, and makes agriculture not only his bufinefs but alfo his amufement. Immediately on their exhibiting a culture fu- perior to the old management of the Mora- vians, he followed it with fo much intelli- gence and fpirit, that he has advanced the va- lue GERMANY. 319 lue of his eftate confiderably : he entered prefently into all their views, and introduced the beft hufbandry of the Auftrian provinces ypon his own lands. Falling into difcourfe on the road with one of his bailiffs, he point- ed out to me feveral large tracks of land, which not long ago were entirely wafte, but are now by this v^orthy nobleman's atten- tion better cultivated than moft of the pro- vince.- He has introduced various new branches of hufbandry, which anfwer better than com- mon crops ; among thefe, hops and faffron he brought from Bohemia; madder from Silefia; and he raifes both hemp and flax in large quantities : all thefe crops he is re- markably attentive to, and gives them fuch uncommon fair play, that his firft trials, con- trary to what is generally met with, turned out greatly fuccefsful ; from whence he has been induced to continue them ever fmce, and greatly to enlarge all his plantations of them ', by which, and various other means, he has improved his revenues in a furprifing manner. The owners of extenfive landed eflates, in poor countries, have all fuch an opportunity of increafing their income, that it is very amazing they donotoftener take advantage of it. If, like the nobleman here mentioned, they 31b TRAVELS THROUGH they would refide upon their eflates, inftead of fpending all their time in the capital, fquan dering their reven ues in a gulf of luxury, the meafure of which is never full, and which cannot fail of impoverifhingthem,and bringing them into the moft flavifli depen- dence upon the will of the court : if they would aft thus, they would find money flow into their coffers in a far greater abundance than they can ever hope to receive from the fmiles of minifters, at the fame time that they would refide where a fliilling goes as far as a pound. In the profufion of a capital, the greateft eflates are fpent without making any vmufual figure ; but in the country, half the income v/ould enable them to build and fur- nifh coftly palaces, and raife whole cities around them to be witnefTes of their fplendor. — I have, in the courfe of my travels, met with feveral inflances which fliew, in the cleared light, the enjoyment and undoubted happinefs which this kind of life confers, even upon noblemen, whoferank andrevenue would allow them all the amufements of any metropolis. It is a moft happy thing to any country, when a fovereign gives all the en- couragement in his power to promote this rural attention in nobles, which cannot fail of GERMAN Y. 321 ©f turning out highly beneficial to the whole tommunity. The 23d I got to Vienna, which is iive- and-twenty miles from Laba^ through a country that is very unequal, part of it being very rich, populous, and well cultivated, and much of it hilly, wild, and to appearance barren. In the cultivated tracks are many noblemen's feats; and the hufbandry around them is vifibly much better than elfewhere, which is owing to their drawing the peafants, as it were, into a firing around them. They plant great quantities of fafFron, which they reckon the mofl profitable crop they have : they have alfo plenty of good crops of wheat and barley; and their extenfive meadows and paftures feed large herds of cattle, which, from the neighbourhood of Vienna, turn to very good account* I faw feveral crops of the turnep cabbage for cattle. But hulbandry fuffers much in all this country, and indeeil through mofl parts of Germany, for want pf inclofures : they might eafily make them, and at a fmall expence, but iTegle£l the work entirely, which mufl be for want of fully un- derflanding the advantages of them: indeed, labour is of fo little value, that every fort of cattle has always a keeper with them, tho' Vol. hi. Y the 313? TRAVELS THROUGH the herd is ever fo fmall, yet corn and faffroa often fuffer, . Vienna is liluated on the fouth fide of the Danube, but has not the advantage of that great river running through it ; for it ftands on a fmall hrancb of it, tl>ere being feveral >{lands formed here, by the river dividing it- ielf. If the fuburbs are included, it is a very large city, but within the v^alls and fortifica- tions it is only three miles in circumference. It is regularly fortified, but has fo few out- works as to be a place of fmall ilrengthj and only defended by a fmall army. At the fiege in 1683 the Turks fliewed themfelves to be extremely ignorant in the art of conduct- ing fuch an enterprise ; and their engineers were miferabte ones, elfe they might have taken the city fome time before the King of Poland raifed the fiege; and had that event happened, Hungary had now been in poffef- fion of the Ottomans. Vienna within the walls makes a mofl: ine- legant appearance, from the narrownefs of the ilreets. I am one who would not give fix- pence for a fine building, if there is not a fuflScient area to view it from. The Englilh b^aft of the church of St. Paul's at London, and will fometlmes afiert it equal to St. Peter's at Rome; but if it wer;c doubly finer, I fhoukl prefer GERMANY, 323 prefer St. Peter's from the opportunity one has of viewing rtt and the area around a great building ought to be fo much efteemed a part of it as to be criticifed with it; and the archite£l's abilities called in queftion for faults in it, as much as if he blundered in the pro*- portion of the cupola. Thus in Vienna there are many palaces (of which I had read and heard much) in ftreets as narrow as old Brif- tol ; and at the fame time all the houfes are five, fix, feven, and fome of them eight (lo- ries high ; and it is faid they have almoft as many ftorles of cellars under ground as of floors above. Formerly all the windows were grated with iron bars, like prifons, from the ilreet to the upper floor, and vaft numbers of houfes are fo now ; but I fee it is left off in the principal palaces. The imperial palace is a flru^lure that will ahfwer to none that fees it; it confiils of fe- veral courts, furrounded with irregular build- ings; though, notwithflanding fome late ad- ditions, it makes but a very mean appearance; their apartments are neither fpacious, nor fur- niftied in a manner one would expe£t, for a court long famed as oneofthemoflexpenfive in Eufope. The library is fuppofed to rank among the firft in Europe ; the number of Y 2 volumes 324 TRAVELS THROUGH volumes are not lefs than ninety thoufand ; and the colle£tion of manufcripts fuppofed to be extremely valuable. I was fhewn feveral great curioiitles, but upon thefe occafions there never is time allowed for any ufeful ex- amination; and if they were, it would lignify little to the unlearned in the oriental tongues, in which the mofl valuable manufcripts are written. Many of the palaces of the nobility are mofh magnificent ftruclures; that of the great Eugene, with his famous library and collec- tions, I had moil pleafure in viewing : the Mansfield palace, and that of Count Daun, are alfo great edifices, with feveral others, ia which the painting, gilding, carving, and furniture, are as rich as pollible. t The univerfity of Vienna is very famous In Germany and Hungary; the number of ftu- dents is confiderable, and they have good ac- commodations- for thofe of fortune, and many valuable privileges. There is not much worth feeing in th^ churches of Vienna; the cathedral is the prin- cipal, and it is a large building ; but nothing is uncommon in it but the heighth of its fpire, which, fince Strafburg is become French, is tlie higheft in the empire. The Jefuits church is a fine building,; and the convents of Carmelites, GERMANY. 325 CarmeUtes, Francifcans, Benedidines, and Auilin Friars, are vifited by thofe who take any delight in viewing thefe fort of buildings; for my part, I have an averiion at feeing fuch ufeful edifices filled with tribes of pernicious orders of lazy priefts, who do nothing to gain their livelihood, but are maintained by the induftry of every body elfe. It is amazing that Roman Catholic princes do not find out that every monk in their dominions might be a foldier, without the country fuffering a whit the more : and in many cafes the fol-i dier would pay well for his maintenance; but as to the monk, he is fubfifled in the moll unufeful of all fpecies of idlenefs. But there are other inftances of the catholic piety of Vienna befides her monks and nuns ; in one of the fquares is a very large and coftly fta- tue of the Trinity, reprefenting the Deity clafping Chrift in his arms, and the Holy Ghofi: hovering over them. This was ereded by the Emperor Leopold, inflead of an equef- trian ftatue, which, in other cities, would have been ere^led to the fovereign. To this famous piece of folly all the Roman Catho- lies bow as they pafs. Religious prejudices fhould certainly be laid afide by all travellers; but is it poffible for a man of fenfe not to re--- joicc, that education has not enflaved him to y 3 ail 326 TRAVELS THROUQH an obfervance of, or veneration for fuch mum- mery? In many inftances, religion makes Ro- man Catholic countries extremely difagree- able. I brought feyeral letters of recommenda- tion to Vienna, to perfons from whofe eon- verfation I expefted fome valuable informa- tion, concerning the general ftate of all the Auftrian dominions at prefent, in refpect of agriculture, manufacflures, commerce, reve? nues, and military povi^er, but I was ftrangely difappointed ; there is a haughty referve in every man of the leaft confequence here, which not only precludes any information of this ibrt, but at the fame time renders a re- sidence in any but a public character very dif- agreeable at Vienna. But after all my letters had failed, that is, introduced me only to people who thought that I had no bufinefs with any thing but eating, drinking, going to court, and playing at cards, a life by no means agreeable to me; after this, I fell acci- dentally into company with a field-officer in their fervice, a native of Milan: this gentle- man was exfrcm^ely communicative, very fenr iible, and had travelled often through mofl of the dominions of the Emprefs Queen. He. gave rpe a very rational and candid account of things, jjs appeared by his manner, and the •GERMAN Y. 327 the confirmations I had afterwards from feveral perfbns in other parts of Europe. To agriculture this gentleman had not at all at- tended; he could glye me no more account of its general iiate in the countries he had been in, than with that of the moon. I found from him, however, that the manufad;ures which have lately been eftabliflied in Hun- gary flourifh very much ; the Emprefs Queen and her miniflers have long been eager to cloath her troops with her fubje(3:s manufac- tures, infiead of felling all their wool unma- nufadiired. Hungary, as v/eli as Auftriaj Bohemia, and Moravia, feed many iheep, eipeclally Hungary, a great part of which is a continued and fertile (heep-walk. Great number of Hungarians have been fet to tvork upon this wool ; and weavers, fpin- ners, reelers, &c, brought from Flanders, to teach the natives to work it; and many of them' have proved very docile in learnihg: fo that at prefent,--\vpollerr-goods^ are made to the amount of near an hundred thoufand pounds a year, which is a very great thing in Hungary ; where, before thefe exertions, were no 'tnanufadlures at all. They are eftablifhed in moft of the populous towns of that king- dom; and if they are brought to employ the poor people in them,- who have no other em* y 4 ployment, 328 TRAVELS THROUGH ployment, it will be an immenfe acquifition, and fave the export of very great fums of mor ney. As to trade, the inland fituation of the Auftrian dominions is fuch as allows of very little foreign commerce. Attempts were made at Trieft, but they were fo languid, and fuf- fered fuch interruptions during the war, that the pommerce of the port is yet nothing that deferves mentioning, notwithftanding that an active prince, liberal in ufeful expence, and attentive to fuch improvernents, might have made Trieft the feat of a confiderable com- merce; but all thefe circumstances have been wanting. The revenues of the dominions of the houfe of Auftria are confiderable ; the following account of them was given to this gentleman by a perfon who had many ppportunities of being vvell inforrned. Bohemia £, 700,000 Moravia — ■ 190,000 Hungary • — -r- 400,000 Auftria • 400,000 Tranfilvania ~r — — - 50,000 Sclavonia and Croatia ioo,oofj Stiria, Carinthia, and Carniola — 200,000 TTyrol, Brixen, Trent 160,000 The countries of Swabia — — 20,000 The GERMANY. 329 The Netherlands 150,000 Milan and Mantua 400,000 Tufcany — — ■ 500,000 Total — — ^ -^ — ^ ;^ 3,270,000 What degree of accuracy there is in this table I am not able to afcertain; but from the information I have received from other hands, 1 believe the total to be near the truth; but Tufcany mufb not be reckoned. The com- mon idea at Vienna coincides with thefe par- ticulars which makes the Imperial revenue near three millions ; though there are fome fanguine politicians who infift on its amount- ing tq five, but that is much exaggerated. The revenues of all thefe countries might be very much improved ; nobody doiibts, but a better fyftem of taxation, and a more cecono- micarcblle£tion, would raife five millions, with very hear as muCh eafe to the people as three at prefent; but the" lower claffes of the people, throughout moft of thefe dominions-, are mir ferably fleeced and pillaged, while the no- bility efcape with paying a much lefs propor- tion than they ought. TheNetherlands might in particular yield a very confiderable revenue, and prove ^he fineft and moil profitable pro- yince§ 330 TRAVELS THROUGH vinces belonging to -the houfe of Auftria ; but' in order to that, great changes fhould be made in the conftitutions of the cities ; manufac- tures fhould receive encouragement, and com- merce be re-eilablifhed in the ports; all which might be ealily done, and the revenues of the fovereign become wonderfully improved ; whereas, at prefent they yield no more than might be expe(Sled if they were fituated no better than Auflria, or Moravia, inftead of being the fineft fpot in Europe in every reipe£l, and inhabited by a people naturally as induftrious as any in the world. Flanders, iince the Dutch were mafters of the naviga^ tion toiVntwerphas wanted a port ; butOftend, for an hundred thoufand pounds, might be made as good a one as any in Europe for merchantmen. The many improvements which have been talked of by the court of Vienna for the here- ditary dominions, in agriculture, maiiufa£l:ures, and commerce, were they put in execution, would at the fame time much improve the re- venue, and in a manner free the country of thofe evils which ufually flow from increaf- ing the public income of a crown. But there is a dilatorinefs and a languor in every thing tranfafted at this court, even in its own moft intricate concerns, that dump the fpirit of a -]E R M A H Y. .33, pf all improvement; fo tliat aiiy objei^of this fort, upon a jnodefate computation, will be J:alkeid of hajf a century before it is executed e fhis was the cafe with the eftablifhni^nt of the woollen manufadlure in Hungary, an^ with every thing elfe, fo that it is not thought the Auftrian reyenijes, however they would admit pf it, will for a long time be put upon a better footing than they are, or have any other im? provements than what refults from oppreffing the lower claffes of the people flill more ; thari which, no meafure can give a greater flab to all general national irr^proyements. Was the King of Pruffia pofleiTed of the Auflrian do? ininions in exchange for his own, we (hould foon fee them maHe a very different appear-? ance; he would raife much greater revenues, with far greater eafe to the people; and would throw fuch a vigour into allthetranfadlions, which the pofleflioii of Flanders and the Ijta- lian dominions would introduce him to, that the importance of them would fpeedily appear in a very different light from what they do at prefent. The great obje£l of attention at Vienna is the army ; this is fb far reprehenfible in poli- tics, as it encreafes the neceflity of laying a foundation previous to every fuperftrudurc : it is the revenue thatpay§ and fupports the army, and 331 TRAVELS THROUGH and all increafe of the latter muft depend on a foregoing increafe of the former : to raife a great revenue is much more eflential than to raife a great army; but the foldiers have a peculiar faculty of fwallowing up a revenue, they have none at creating it. That prince, therefore, who would be truly formidable, fhould attend to the profperity of his income, before he thinks of greatly Increallng his troops. - The foilov/ing are the particulars of the prefent {landing forces of the houfe of Auftria. I infert them on the fame authority as the a- bove paper of the revenue ; believing, from other information which I have received, that it is near the truth; though I Ihould remark, that all lifts of armies are apt to exceed the reality, rather than fall beneath it. Men, Dragoons Cuirafliers JIuflars and Croats Hunters ■ — pree troops — Jnfantry Artillery 23,846 16,000 14,640 6,300 8,000 165,386 2,800 Total 235,972 The GERMANY. 333 The whole army, whatever thetotalmay be, is certahily in excellent order ; the regiments full, an dwell officered; their cloathing regular- ly delivered ; their arms much better than ever ; the artillery very numerous ; and no expence has been fpared in forming engineers; the magazines of ammunition and all forts of military ftores full, and in good order: thele attentions, have occupied the court ever fince the peace, and they have been indefatigable in them. Now that all thefe particulars are compleated, they are employed in repairing all the fortifications in Bohemia, Moravia, Auftria, Hungary, and Tranfilvania ; new ones are In fome places ere£ling, and many old ones greatly improved ; this is a work of immenfe expence, and confequently it goes on flowly. In every one of thefe particulars, the Auftrians flrength is greater than at the breaking out of the laft war. I before re- marked, that the cafe was the fame with the King, of Pruflia. Thefe potentates are cer- tainly jealous of each other, but, I believe, in no refpe£t that threatens a frefh war ; but the ftate of affairs in other parts makes it neceflary for them to be ftrongly armed. The afpedt of affairs in Pruffia and Poland fills the houfe of Auflria with uneafinefs ;= mid although Pruffia efpoufes in her mani- feflos 354 TRAVELS THROUGH feftos the fame caufe in Polifh affairs as the Ruffian Emprefs, flill it can only be be- caufe the power of that empire is too great for him to break with. Moft certainly the in- creafe of the formidablenefs of Ruffia ought, in good poUtics, to fill both Pruffia and Au- ftria with the deepefl jealoufy : future alliances with it, in cafe of a new war with Germany, muft be very uncertain ; and againfl whoever fhe declares, her weight will probably fall too heavy to be refifted. The opportunity of the war between the Ruflians and Turks has generally been taken by the Auftrians for at- tacking the Porte : fuch a meafure noiv would infure the refloration of Belgrade and Servia, and perhaps yet greater advantages; but not making ufe of it may be owing to two reafons : firfl:, in return for the Turks iwt playing the fame game when the Emprefs Queen was at war with Pruffia; and fecondly, becaufe fuch a condu6: would give greater ad- vantages to the arms of Ruffia than the houfe of Auflria wiihes to fee. CHAP. GERMAN Y^ ^ CHAP. X. journey from Vienna through Aiijlria — "Defer ip^ tlon of the Archduchy— Bavaria- — Mu7ikb "^Kevenues and Forces, JULY I ft I left Vienna, and that ^zj tra- veiled forty miles to St. Poltu, through a Very various country. Near Vienna it is very gay, being lightly adorned with villas, which have extenfive gardens and planted groves about them, but all in a miferable tafte. I flopped to viewone pretty near the road, which the pbftilions told me belonged to a" great no- bleman at court; a defcription of the ground before the houfe will give a tolerable idea of the tafte moft prevalent here in ornamenting their country feats. A canal with a fmali bridge over it in the center parted the area before the houfe from the road : from the bridge to the houfe door was about an hundred yards; a broad ftone-wayled from one to theo- ther; on each fide, ranged in exa6t order, was a ftatue, an urn, and a crofs interchangeably; thefe were on a flip of grafs : on the other Ude two canals nicely laidout, Jikethe former, by rule, and at each corner of the three a ilatue. The ground on each fide was formed into 33^ TRAVELS THROUGH into a grafs-plat, furrounded by a parterre of flowers, and in the center of each plat a fmall fountain. From thefe particulars of the ap- proach to a rural villa, all unfeen may be very exadly guefled ; and it evidently appears that the Auftrians are at leaft one hundred years be- hind us in the art of gardening. It is the fame with the French, and all the other nations of Europe. In fome gardens I was fliewn wheii in Italy, before I was told that they were ex- ecuted in imitation of nature, upon the plan of my countryman Brown, whofe fame had reached there ; and it is not eafy to be con- ceived how ridiculous every thing was ; the leaft deviations from line and compafs work, amidft a great deal of it, were efteemed exer- tions in the art of imitating nature. A more ridiculous jumble was never {een ; much worfe than thofe made purely artificial. Ornamenting a piece of ground in the manner of our great gardener, and in the tafte yet fuperior, in which fome private gentlemen in England have laid out their grounds, is an art that requires genius, and more attention than will ever be given to it in countries where they refide ten months out of the twelve in the capitaU and very many the other two alfo: where this is the cafe the expence will not be fpared, for what is wanting in every thing that re- lates GERMANY, 337 iates to the country; no article about a noble- man while he refides in the country in Eng- land, but what infinitely exceeds that of any foreign nobleman of equal fortune. Their wealth is all expended upon theirtown houfes and their town refidence j it is not therefore to be wondered at any more, that the EngliQi have not fuch fine palaces in London, or that the French and ItaUans have not fuch fine country feats. Thefe forty miles do not exhibit an agri- culture that is very flourilhing, yet the coun- try is not much in want of people, for the towns and villages are thick. The foil is in , general very good, but they do not fc^em to have any ideas of cultivating it with neatiiefs : wild fhrubbery grounds are fuffered to break into the corn, in ragged borders, and fmall v/afte fpotSj where the plough, upon account of fome hillock, or hole, does not go, are left covered with weeds, to blow all over their fallows : they have no idea of cleaning fuch ipots by way of prevention, and fuch numbers of them as I faw in this day's journey would not be met with in half an Englifli county. They fow large quantities of faftron, v/hich theyreckon a profitable culture, an acre yield- ing a produce of about three pounds, if the crop is good. There are many vineyards. Vol. IIL Z but 338 TRAVELS THROUGH but the wine fells fo badly, that they aflured me, corn and faifron were in general much better and more profitable ; and they do not confine their vines to tracks improper for ploughing. Wheat, barley, rye, peafe, and beans, are commonly cultivated, but no oats; the crops are bat middling. Turneps,turnep cabbages, cabbages, and potatoes, are cultivated in large quantities; the former for cattle, and the po- tatoes for fattening hogs, for which they boil them. They have large herds of fwine, which feed all fummer long in the woods, many of which are extenfive. Horned cattle are alfo very plentiful here ; and as they houfe them in the winter, they raife large quantities of dung, which ought to enfure a much better hufbandry than theirs. I pafTed a fmall farm, near St. Poltu, that was cnt out of a walle, and to appearance a barren common, on the fide of a large hill, difpofed into ten fields by beautiful quick hedges, which put me in mind of the beft cultivated part of England: the inclofures rifmg one above another, on the fide of the hill, werefeen diflinclly from the road ; they were covered with various crops, which appeared much fuperior to thole of the cultivated parts of the country I had pafftd; the houfe was fmall but ex- tremely neat. As foon as I had looked atten- tively GERMANY. 339 tively at this very agreeable fight I was go- ing to make up to itj but recoIle6ling that I fhould be in the dark, I determined to go on to the ftage, and come next morning to view that farm, which feemed a creation in the midfl of a defart, I accordingly put my intention in execution tjhe morning of the 2d, and returned about three miles to the place, and allcing for the mailer of it, he appeared immediately; a fine tall, open-countenanced foldier, in an old fuit of regimentals. I defired to fee his farm, up- on which he very readily walked with me in- to it. I went through all the ten inclofures ; the hedges were regularly planted, and had each of them a ditch ; the gates were all in good order, and every thing carried an ap- pearance of neatnefs, moil uncommon in Germany. He had three meadows, each of them watered by afmallflreamhehad brought from the hill above his farm ; it filled a little pond for watering the cattle, and might be condu6led at pleafure, in the proper feafon, over all parts of the fields for manuring them, which he pra6lifes in winter and fpring. He had a field of wheat, another of barley, two of clover, and three of turneps and cab- bages j and his fields were all much of the fune fize, being each about fix Englifh acres. Xurneps and cabbages he grew on his faUow Z 2 for 340 TRAVELS THROUGH for cleaning the land ; fucceeded them with barley, and then took clover, upon which he fovvs his wheat. This hufbandry, which nearly refembles the beft of Flanders, fur- prized me in the midflofAuftria, where no- thing of the kind is to be found. He keeps a dairy of cows, a fmall flock of fheep on the neighbouring wafte, and oxen for ploughing andcarting; he houfes all his cattle in winter; his ilieep every night in fheep houfes j and litters every thing well with fern, which he cuts upon the wafte. He is . extremely at- tentive to raifmg large quantities of dung, which he manages by keeping as many cattle as he poilibly can, and by mixing turf and virgin earth with his dung as the cattle make it all winter long; by this means he is en- abled to manure threefields, or eighteen acres, very richly every year; but what gives a virtue to his dunghillfuperior to any thing elfe, is his bringing all the human ordure away from the little town of Poku, for which fome of the inhabitants, ignorant of its value, give a trifle for taking it away: he is at the expence of cleaning all the neceffaries there, and of carting it to his farm: he mixes it up with his dung and virgin earth, and aflures me that it forms the richefl compofl in the world: all the manuie he raifes in this manner being ap» plied to his turnep and cabbage grounds, he gets GERMANY. 34! gets prodigiouscropsofthofe vegetables j and I remarked that they wtL'e kept perfectly free from weeds by hoeing : his cabbages are all planted in regular rows on ridges, and the ipaces between the rows ploughed feveral times while growing, as well to kill the weeds as to keep the land in good tillage j all which appeared to me to be an excellent fjilem. His crops of wheat yield four quarters an acre; his barley five -, his clover gives four tons of hay at two mov*^ings 3 and his turneps and cabbages maintain a vaft flock : an acre of the former he reckons fufficient to winter- feed two oxen or cows; one of cabbages will winter three or four; but the expences of them are higher. All thefe crops, I fuppofe, are equal to the beft cultivated parts of Eng- land. Upon returning to his houfe he gave me bis hiftory. He was a corporal in a regiment offoot, quartered during fix years in Flanders and Brabant, where, as he had always a ftrong bent towards hufoandry, he remarked very minutely their practices, and often worked in the fields for Flemiili farmers. Upon the v/ar breaking out with the king of PruiTia he was early in that fervice, and made a ferjeant, in which capacity he behaved fo much to Mar- fhal Daun's fatisfa6lion at the battleof Hock- chirken, in fight of him, that he gave him pro- 3 7. r> mifes 342 TRAVELS THROUGH mifes upon the fpot of promotion; thefs were not thought of afterwards, till being re- prefented by another perfon to the Emprefs Queen, and allowed by Count Daun, flie perfonally afked him, in the prefence of the whole court, if he had any particular requefl to make : upon which he afked his difcharge, and a piece of this wafle to cultivate, being born in the pari(h. It was granted at once; and further, his fovereign built him the houfe and offices diredly, and gave him an bundled pounds to ftock the farm with. With this fmall beginning he went to work diredlly, and in nine years has raifed every thing to the flate I faw. His induflry is un- bounded: though a continued fuccefshas at- tended all his undertakings, and his crops prove as fine as poffible, bringing him in large fums of money, yet he continues to work with the fame feverity as ever, and does much the greatefl part of all the bufmefs of his farm with his own hands; he has a fon about twenty-five who executes the reft. The Em- prefs has been twice to fee him, and exprefled the higheft approbation of his conduit, and made him a handfome prefent. His methods have been put in execution, under his own di region, upon the eftates of two noblemen in the neighbourhood, and with good fuc- cefs; GERMANY. 343 feefsj fo that this worthy foldier is like to be of more benefit to his country than half a dozen generals; and fhews that nothing is of more importance than to eftablifh fuch ex- amples as thefe in various parts of a domi- nion: for although they may fpread ilowly, yet they certainly wil! fpread, and that they cannot do without being of very great pub- lic benefit. By night I reached a little town called Munfbery, being half way to Lintz, at the diflance of thirty miles from PoltUj through a country that is cultivated in a very different manner from the foldier's farm 1 had left, whofe name (by the way) is Picco; The crops are in general bad and very full of weeds; and theyfeem to plough the foil very badly, although their ploughs are drawn by fix oxen, and they have two men, or a man and alad, to drive them, with another man to hold the plough: it is evident from this that the price of labour is low, or the farmer, that is the nobility, could not allow fuch a fuper- fluity of hands; but while the time of the peafants belongs to their lords, without any pay, fuch inftances will be very common ; but the whole fyftem makes a very different figure from my friend Picco's, whofe farm is a contrafl to the whole archduchy. They cultivate many hops, faffron, and v^nes, and Z 4 thefe 344 TRAVELS THROUGH thefe articles exhauft all their lands applied to common huibandry of the dung which they ought to have, without yielding a return proportioned. Picco, when I afked him why he did not cultivate thefe articles, affuredme that none of them equalled common crops in profit, provided the latter were managed in the manner they ought to be; and of this I ought to have no doubt, for all thefe uncom- mon articles require a great deal of attention, and an infinity of labour, efpecially vines, while the produce is of fuch a bad fort that the returns are inconfiderable. Near Lintz the country improves much, being in itfelf finely variegated with hills and dales, wood and water; it is alfo better cultivated : there is a very little wafte land, and many feats of the nobility are fcattered about it, attra6led, Ifup- pofe, by the agreeablenefs of the country. Lintz is extremely well fituated on the banks of the Danube : it is fmall, well built, and a neat place 3 the ftreets well paved, and kept very clean. What fets off the buildings in an unufual manner, is the materials of which they are raifed, being a white flone that preferves its colour. The market-place is large and handfome, and is adorned with two fountains. The Empreis has a palace here, well furnilhed, which from an high fi- tuation overlooks the courfc of the Danube very GERMANY. 345 Very beautifully : fhe ufed to come here often, but has not of late years. The Jefuits college is one of the beft buildings In the place, and the library has the reputation of being re- markably well chofen. This place is the capital of Upper Auftria, for the ttates affem- ble no where elfe. For its fize, it is very po- pulous, which is owing to fome manufac- tures they have that are flouriOnng, particu- larly that of woollen goods, and of iilk and worfted j alfo gun-barrels, for which they are famous. The wool they work up is that of Auflria, and much comes from Bohemia j all the fabricks employ 6, or 700 hands. The 5th I got to Newberg in Bavaria, the diflance forty miles. This line of country is all very agreeable, from the inequalities of the ground, and its open groves, with many rivers ; nor is it wanting in numerous little towns and villages, the neighbourhood of the Danube drawing many inhabitants, by the conftant trade carried on upon it ; and by the numerous boats, barges, floopc, &c. which pafs and repafs upon all forts of bufinefs. I obferved hops, faftron, and vines were com- mon culture, and fome flax, which is made into coarfe linens in the neighbouring towns. ■Newberg is a little place, but very well built, and remarkably clean. The Eledor Palatine is fovereign of the duchy, of which it is the capital; 346 TRAVELS THROUGii capital; and has a fmall palace here, whicn however contains nothing worth feeing. The Jefuits church is the bell: public edifice in the place. The only trade of Newberg is wine, but very little of it is goodj feveral forts are fold fo cheap as three halfpence a quart. - The 6th I reached Muldorf, the diftancC •fifty miles, through a very fine, populous, and well cultivated country being part of the Ele6lorate of Bavaria. There feems through this line of country, to be more induftry, ac- tivity and happinefs, than in any I had pafTed for a long while 3 and yet the peafants are in a ftate of villainage as well as elfewhere, but they are treated in a kinder manner, have more property and better houfes ; and many of them are alfo farmers, who by induftry and frugality have faved money, and find out the means of difpofing of it to good advantage. Much of this country is enclofed, than which there cannot be any improvement of fo much confequence; and the prefent Ele6lor has given many privileges and encouragements to all whoenclofe their farms, as well as exempt^ ing them from antient cuftoms and rights, which were extremely injurious to open lands. There are many vineyards in this country, and the wine is better than that of Auflria. Sheep fecm to be a principal article in their huf])aridrv ; tl"icy keep great numbers, and of a better GERMANY. ^47 a better breed than common; whicli I am told was originally owing to procuring fome rams from Flanders. They yield large fleeces, and there are many manufactories for work- ing up the the wool, which receive great en- couragement from the government. Every farm of any fize, (that is, every divifion of an ellate that is under a diftind; fteward or bailiff) has a large fheep-houfe, with a roof, but open on one fide to the fouth j in this houfe they fold their fheep every night the whole year round, and depend on it princi- pally for manuring their lands : when they begin to fold, they fpread over the floor light virgin foil, turf, fand, or peat earth, and fold upon it till it is very moifl and dirty; then they make a frefh layer, and fo go on ; but t<> every eighteen inches of depth, (for they re- move the heap but once a year) they litter with flraw; and in extreme wet or fnowy weather they do the fame. This is upon the whole an excellent fyftem for raifing manure, and is a Flemifli cuftom, though with one or two variations: but I fhould think the fheep lying upon fuch a dunghill would be prejudicial to their health; however, the Bava- rians affert the contrary, and fay that the health of the animal does not fuffer in the leafl; and that the wool is much better than it would be if the ilieep were expofed to the weather. Muidorf 348 TRAVELS THROUGH Muldorf is a little town, agreeably fituated, and regularly fortified, but is not a place of any great ftrength ; the ftreets are broad, ftrait, and well built, and the market-place fpacious, and furrounded with feveral buildings that are a great ornament to it. There are feve- ral churches and convents, but none that contain any thing remarkable. The 7th I got to Munich, the diftance fe- ven and thirty miles, and the country agree- able and well cultivated : there are many more nobility who refide conftantly on their lands in this country, than in any I have feen in Germany; and to this I attribute the ad- vantage of the fuperior cultivation : for as the nobles are the farmers, it is no wonder that eftates there are managed better under the mafler's eye than in his abfence. Although there are not many of them that are profi- cients in agriculture, yet a life pafTed in the midfl of its bufmefs, mufl yield a greater . knowledge of its circumflances than one which is entiiely employed in the parade of a court. Befides, there can be little doubt but the nobles themfelves treat their peafants better than the race of bailiffs, agents. Sec. who ufually opprefs and fquceze them the more, in order to have the better opportunity of enriching themfelves; and I find it evident, wherever I have been in Germany, that the landlords GERMANY. 349 landlords are the richeft, and their eftates the beft cultivated, where the peafants are allowed fome degree of liberty and property. The happier that race of people, the better for the nobles; the latter will not in all cafes be brought to believe this, but nothing admits of clearer proof. Their corn through this track of country looked very well -, and I obferved particularly, that their fallows intended for next year were well ploughed, and clean; whereas they are' full of weeds in many parts of Germany, and made fuch bad management as I had feen in Auilria. The foil here is a rich loam, with fome light tracks : they plough chiefly with oxen. They fallow their lands for wheat, and then fow barley; after the barley, they take peafe or buck-wheat, and then turneps, or cabbages; but they do not fow any clover which the Auftrian foldier, and all Flanders And Brabant, find fo profitable. Wheat yields two quarters and an half per acre, barley three, and buck-wheat four; and their tur^ neps and cabbages are applied to feeding their cattle and (heep; but all are houfed in winter. Munich I think, without exception, is the fineft city in Germany; Drefden, while in its grandeur, I am told furpafiTed it; and fome parts of Berlin are very beautiful, but, all things confidered,they nowyieldto this place. It ^Q TRAVELS THROUGH It is fituated on the river Iler, which dividing into feveral channels, waters all parts of the town : (o that little flreams run thro' many of the flreets, confined in ftone channels, which have amofl clean and agreeable effecl. The ftreets, fquares, and courts are fpacious and airy, which fet off all the buildings much, and make them appear finer than others much more cofily in other cities. The ilreets in particular are fo ftrait, that many of them interfecffc each other at right-angles, and are very broad, and extremely well built. There are fixteen churches and monafteries in it, many of them very handfome edifices; thefe, with the eledoral palace, and other public buildings, take up near half the city, fo that it may eafily be fuppofed the place is in general very well built. The principal of all thefe public edifices is the electoral palace, Vv-hich is rather a con- venient than an elegant building. It is very lar?e, having four courts in it, and all of them large ; but there is a want ot finifliing in the infides of all the places in Germany that can- not fail difgufling an Ejiglifliman, who has been ufed to fee the houfes of the nobility in his own country finilhed to the garrets as compleatly as a fnuff-box; and certainly it is a moll agreeable circumftance. In the palace of Munich thefincfi: room, which is the grand hall, GERMANY. 35? hall, being an hundred and eighteen f^Qt long by fifty two broad, is open to the roof, fo as entirely to deftroy the efFedt which would refult from fuch a fize if finifhed : birds fly about it as in a barn, and drop their fa- vours on the heads of the company as they pafs : I have in Germany feen many inftances of unfinifhing equal to this. There is a great profulion of marble in the feveral apartments^ but it is not wrought in an agreeable manner. The furniture is in general old ; it has been very rich, but has nothing in it llriking; nor is the colle6lion of pi6lures comparable to many others in Germany. The Mufeum is well filled with many curiofitles; of which, as Keyfler gives a lift, I fhall fay no more of them. The Jefuits college is among the fineft buildings belonging to the church: it is very fpacious, The great church, and the Francif- cans monaftery, are alfo worth feeing; the latter order is pofrefTed of very great revenues. Several palaces of the nobiUty make a very good figure, and the town-hoafe is better than many I have feen. The number of m-^ habitants is computed at fifty thoufand. The palaces mod worth feeing are the E- le6lor's country ones of Sleilheim and Nymr» phenburg, near Munich. Sleifheim is a fine |)uiiding, and much better finifli^d than that of 352 TRAVELS THROUGH of Munich; the portico fupported by marble pillars is fine : in the apartments, which are furnifhed in an agreeable manner, is a very good collection of pictures, but they are chieiiy by Fiemifh mailers. Nymphenburg exhibits a German tafle of gardening in perfection, the Bavarians holding them to be the fineft in the empire; the fituation, wood, and water v/ould admit of fomething beauti- ful, but here is nothing but the old-fa£hioned fountains, ilatues, monfters. Sec, It is thought by moil perfons at Munich, as well as in other parts of Germany, that the electorate of Bavaria has thoroughly re- covered the mifchiefs it fuffered in the war of 1744, and is now as rich and as populous as ever. The electoral revenues are reckoned to amount to fix hundred thoufand pounds a year, and are improving: the landing army confifts of eleven thouiand foot, and three thoufand horfe; but the Bavarians fay, their prince could bring forty thoufand men into the field: however, it is certain, that if he could bring them there, he could not main- tain them, without their being in the pay of foreigners. While the houfe of Bavaria con- tinues on good terrns with that of Auftria, there is no danger of its fuffering by the elcc- tora,te being again made the feat of war. F I N I S,